RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/16/2023

                                        Tuesday, 


Karabakh Leaders Slam EU


Nagorno-Karabakh - Karabakh Armenians rally in Stepanakert against the 
Azerbaijani blockade of the Lachin corridor, May 9, 2023.


Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership accused the European Union late on Monday of 
turning a blind eye to Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin corridor when it 
reacted to European Council President Charles Michel’s remarks made after the 
latest Armenian-Azerbaijani summit in Brussels.

Michel, who hosted the talks between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, made no mention of the five-month blockade 
that has caused serious shortages of food and medicine as well as an energy 
crisis in Karabakh.

Instead, he urged Baku to embark on a dialogue with “Armenians living in the 
former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast” for the purpose of “guaranteeing the 
rights and security of this population.”

“This fact shows that the president of the European Council not only does not 
hinder but actually encourages Azerbaijan to use the sufferings of the people of 
Artsakh as a political tool,” the Karabakh foreign ministry charged in a 
statement.

It said Michel’s remarks also demonstrate that “the EU leadership continues to 
ignore the legal rights and interests of the people of Artsakh and is guided 
only by its own geopolitical and short-term interests in the region to the 
detriment of the values of democracy and human rights proclaimed by the EU.”

The statement added that only international recognition of the Karabakh 
Armenians’ right to self-determination can be “the basis for a sustainable 
settlement of the conflict.”

The Armenian government stopped championing that right a year ago. Pashinian 
subsequently declared that it recognizes Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

Michel implied after Sunday’s summit that Yerevan is now also ready to recognize 
Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh. The Armenian opposition expressed serious 
concern over this declaration, renewing its allegations that Pashinian is 
forcing the Karabakh Armenians to live under Azerbaijani rule.

By contrast, the strongly-worded Karabakh statement contained no criticism of 
Pashinian.




Yerevan Still Reluctant To Clarify Stance On Karabakh’s Status

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - Deputy Foreign Minister Mnatsakan Safarian speaks to reporters, 
Yerevan, .


Two days after the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan reportedly made progress 
during talks in Brussels, the Armenian government again declined to clarify on 
Tuesday whether it recognizes Azerbaijani sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Charles Michel, the European Union chief who hosted the talks, said Armenian 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev “confirmed 
their unequivocal commitment to … respective territorial integrity of Armenia 
(29,800 square kilometers) and Azerbaijan (86,600 square kilometers).”

The total Soviet-era area of Azerbaijan cited by Michel includes Karabakh.

“Negotiations are ongoing on the provision of international guarantees for 
ensuring Nagorno-Karabakh’s rights and security,” Deputy Foreign Minister 
Mnatsakan Safarian repeatedly told reporters as they pressed him on the 
implications of Michel’s statement.

Safarian said Armenia always recognized Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. “So 
there is nothing new here,” he said.

The diplomat did not clarify whether Yerevan will explicitly recognize Karabakh 
as a part of Azerbaijan in a peace treaty currently discussed by the conflicting 
sides.

The Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers are scheduled to meet in Moscow 
later this week for further talks on the treaty.

Meanwhile, Armenian opposition leaders continued to portray Michel’s remarks as 
further proof of Pashinian’s readiness to help Baku regain control over Karabakh.

“86,600 square kilometers means Karabakh is a part of Azerbaijan,” said Armen 
Rustamian of the opposition Hayastan alliance.

Pashinian has not yet made any public statements on the Brussels summit held on 
Sunday. In recent months, he has publicly encouraged Karabakh’s leaders to 
negotiate with Azerbaijan while accusing Baku of planning to commit “genocide” 
in the Armenian-populated region.

The authorities in Stepanakert have repeatedly denounced Pashinian’s comments on 
the conflict with Azerbaijan. In a joint statement issued on April 19, the five 
political groups represented in the Karabakh parliament again accused him of 
undermining the Karabakh Armenians’ right to self-determination which was for 
decades supported by international mediators.




CSTO Exit ‘Not On Armenia’s Agenda Yet’

        • Astghik Bedevian

ARMENIA - The leaders of Russia, Armenia and other CSTO member states pose for a 
photograph during a summit in Yerevan, November 23, 2022.


Armenia is not considering leaving the Collective Security Treaty Organization 
(CSTO) despite its unprecedented tensions with other CSTO member states, a 
senior Armenian official said on Tuesday.

Earlier this year, the Armenian government cancelled a CSTO military exercise 
planned in Armenia and refused to appoint a deputy secretary-general of the 
Russian-led military alliance over what it sees as a lack of CSTO support in the 
conflict with Azerbaijan. It also rejected a CSTO offer to deploy a monitoring 
mission to the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

The tensions have called into question Armenia’s continued membership in the 
organization. In a newspaper interview published over the weekend, the secretary 
of the country’s Security Council, Armen Grigorian, said Yerevan discussed the 
possibility of leaving the alliance. He gave no details.

Deputy Foreign Minister Mnatsakan Safarian suggested that the discussions took 
place shortly after Azerbaijan launched offensive military operations along the 
Armenian border last September.

An exit from the CSTO is “not on Armenia’s agenda now,” Safarian said, adding 
that Pashinian’s government may revisit the issue in the future.

“Yes, the situation is complicated, but being a CSTO member state and also 
having [membership] obligations, we continue to hope that our efforts will 
produce some results,” Safarian told reporters.

Armenia - CSTO Secretary General Imangali Tasmagambetov at a meeting with 
Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikian, Yerevan, March 16, 2023.

Grigorian complained last month that “the security mechanisms that were supposed 
to protect us are not working now.” “Armenia is trying to find new security 
guarantees,” he told Armenian Public Television.

Safarian would not say whether the authorities in Yerevan see any realistic 
alternative to Armenia’s membership in the CSTO and bilateral military ties with 
Russia.

Armen Rustamian, a leading member of the main opposition Hayastan alliance, 
believes that in the absence of such an alternative Armenia’s estrangement from 
the alliance of six ex-Soviet states carries serious national security risks.

“Without having a new security system they are trying to wreck the existing 
one,” Rustamian charged.

“Leave the CSTO and explain why you did that, or stay in the CSTO and use all, 
even minimal chances of getting the CSTO to address our security problems,” he 
said, appealing to Pashinian’s administration. “We are becoming an unreliable 
partner, and that is adding to threats and dangers facing increasingly facing 
our country.”

Pashinian claimed in March that it is the CSTO that could “leave Armenia.” The 
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, laughed off that remark, 
saying that she has trouble understanding its meaning. A senior Russian diplomat 
afterwards called for an end to the “harmful” spat.




Italian Police Seize $880 Million Of Cocaine ‘Bound For Armenia’


Italy - A screenshot from an official video of Italian police finding 2.7 tons 
of cocaine allegedly bound for Armenia, .


Police in Italy said on Tuesday that they have seized 2.7 tons of “extremely 
pure” cocaine destined for Armenia.

In a statement, Italy’s Guardia di Finanza police force said the consignment of 
drugs worth more than 800 million euros ($880 million) was found in refrigerated 
banana containers shipped to the Calabrian port of Gioia Tauro from Ecuador.

Armenia was the final destination of the shipment, via Georgia’s Black Sea port 
of Batumi, said the statement.

Calabria is home to the Ndrangheta crime syndicate, which is now widely regarded 
as Italy's most powerful mafia organization playing a central role in the drugs 
trade.

Earlier this month, the Italian police also found in Gioia Tauro 600 kilograms 
of cocaine which they said was bound for other parts of Italy as well as 
Croatia, Greece and Georgia.

Armenian law-enforcement authorities did not immediately react to their latest 
major drug bust. It was not clear whether the authorities will try to 
investigate the alleged cocaine shipment to Armenia foiled in Italy.

Armenia - Opposition deputy Agnessa Khamoyan speaks during a news conference in 
Yerevan, November 19, 2021.

Agnessa Khamoyan, an Armenian opposition parliamentarian, expressed serious 
concern over the development. She suggested that senior Armenian officials or 
“persons very close to the government” were involved in the botched drug 
trafficking operation.

The number of drug trafficking cases recorded by the Armenian police nearly 
doubled last year, highlighting a growing problem in a country not accustomed to 
widespread drug abuse. The sharp rise in such cases is widely blamed on 
increasingly accessible synthetic drugs mainly sold through the internet.

Khamoyan mentioned this “awful statistics” in a Facebook post on the Italian 
police statement. “This is a serious threat to national security, and I am sorry 
to say that the state is not taking any serious steps to tackle it,” she wrote.

Some pro-government lawmakers likewise criticized the Armenian police over the 
alarming trend when they met with Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian in February. 
Ghazarian assured them that the police are stepping up their fight against 
drug-related crimes.


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