Armenia’s main trading partner turns its back on it – horticulture will heavily greatly impacted

Nov 11 2023

EastFruit experts draw attention to a number of sequential events that have a negative impact on Armenia’s ability to export its fruits and vegetables, as well as other types of goods. Moreover, these events surprisingly coincide with the cooling of relations between Armenia and Russia, which the Armenian leadership actively accuses of failure to fulfill obligations on Karabakh.

What kind of events are these? First of all, this is an announcement about unexpected road repairs on Upper Lars, which is the only route for the delivery of goods from Armenia to Russia. Repairing this mountainous road in the winter makes no logical sense and this is why such an announcement is suspicious. The only alternative route goes through Azerbaijan, which means that Armenians will have to spend much more to export via that road, and secondly, this road goes via the country with which, until recently, Armenia was in an active phase of war, meaning that chances of using it are not so high. Here’s another coincidence –  Russi suddenly discovered unspecified “dangerous viruses” in tomatoes supplied from Armenia. Therefore, it is possible that this will be followed by a ban on the supply of products. They never bothered to even specify the types of viruses.

Read also: Georgia imported large volumes of blueberries from Ukraine – what’s wrong with this fact?

According to EastFruit, 94% of all fruit and vegetable exports from Armenia are exported to Russia, with 35% of all export revenue coming from greenhouse tomatoes. In addition to tomatoes, Armenia exports to the Russian market fresh strawberries, sweet peppers, table grapes, apricots, cabbages, culinary herbs, apples, peaches, nectarines, cherries, as well as nuts, primarily hazelnuts. Armenia currently does not have alternative markets for the exports of these goods, except for hazelnuts, which can be supplied to the EU. Naturally, we should expect that Armenia will try to increase exports to the markets of Georgia, Ukraine, and Moldova, where its products are not subject to import duties, but these countries are also large exporters, and these markets have completely different price realities. It will be theoretically possible to sell Armenian products to EU countries such as Bulgaria and Romania, but subject to an increase in quality, which can’t be achieved quickly and a significant reduction in prices. Consequently, impact on horticulture of Armenia could be significant.

Let us recall that Armenia recently demonstratively ratified the Rome Statute, which implies, in particular, the obligation to arrest Russian President Vladimir Putin in the event of his arrival in Armenia for extradition to the International Criminal Court (ICC), where Putin is held as a suspect, and the ICC has issued a warrant for his arrest.

EastFruit
https://east-fruit.com/en/news/armenias-main-trading-partner-turns-its-back-on-it-horticulture-will-heavily-greatly-impacted/

Who Is Winning The Nagorno-Karabakh War?

Nov 11 2023

Who is winning the Nagorno-Karabakh war?

Modern Military | Future Arms & Current News

The onset of the first conflict in Artsakh (also known as Nagorno-Karabakh) occured during the 1990s. As a result, brought the region’s unresolved status into sharp focus. Furthermore, this pivotal issue dominated the peace talks, with various resolutions proposed by the OSCE Minsk Group. Including comprehensive and phased solutions, the Common State, Key West, the Kazan document, and the Lavrov plan. Thus, all aimed at reaching a consensual resolution for Artsakh’s status.

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Army Artsakh

Ultimately, Azerbaijan opted to address this matter through military action. This decision likely took shape in the early 2000s. With Azerbaijan believing that military engagement would yield more favorable outcomes than diplomatic negotiations. The nation strategically awaited a geopolitically opportune moment, which emerged in 2020. Influenced by the global COVID-19 pandemic, in addition, political changes in the United States. And of course evolving perceptions of Armenia-Russia relations post the 2018 Velvet Revolution.

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Logo of the Hamza Division, a Free Syrian Army group in northern Aleppo.

Hamza Division – https://twitter.com/alhamza_brigade

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National Security Service (Armenia)

Government of Armenia – http://www.yerkirmedia.am/wap.php?act=news&lan=hy&id=14820

In response to these developments, the international community’s reaction to Azerbaijan’s forceful eviction of Armenians from Artsakh was limited to standard expressions of concern, pledges of humanitarian aid for Armenian refugees. Additionally, calls came for Azerbaijan to respect the rights of Armenians wishing to return to Artsakh. As recently stated in a joint U.S.-EU declaration.

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Police of the Republic of Armenia

Government of Armenia – http://www.armenianow.com/news/44993/armenia_proshyan_village_mayor_murder_arrest

Some speculate that the disbandment of the Republic of Artsakh and the displacement of its Armenian inhabitants might pave the path to lasting peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The reasoning is that with the primary obstacle, the status of Artsakh, now removed. There should be no hindrance to peace between the two nations.

The second issue is the proposed “Zangezur corridor,” envisaged to connect Azerbaijan with its exclave Nakhichevan and Turkey through Armenian territory. Though the November 10, 2020, trilateral statement addressed restoring communications, including routes to Nakhichevan, it did not explicitly mention a “corridor.” Nonetheless, Azerbaijan has linked this to the operation of the Berdzor (Lachin) Corridor and insists on special guarantees for the safety of Azerbaijanis traveling through Armenia, without addressing similar concerns for Armenians.

Badge of the Azerbaijani Land Forces

The likelihood of Azerbaijan using military force to enforce these demands remains a subject of speculation. The enclave issue seems the most probable trigger for immediate military action, with Azerbaijan potentially justifying it as liberating its own lands, recognized by Armenia as part of Azerbaijan.

In conclusion, the justifications for military action to establish the “Zangezur corridor” or enforce the “Western Azerbaijan” concept are less clear!

However, Azerbaijan may continue to leverage these demands to exert pressure on Armenia and delay any formal agreements. Azerbaijan may also wait for another opportune geopolitical moment to assert these goals through force.

“Clear Intention of Ethnic Cleansing”: Israeli Holocaust Scholar Omer Bartov Warns of Genocide in Gaza

Nov 10 2023

Israeli American scholar Omer Bartov, one of the world’s leading experts on the Holocaust, says Israel’s brutal assault on the Gaza Strip is at risk of becoming a genocide. The monthlong air and ground war has killed more than 11,000 Palestinians in the besieged enclave, a majority of them women and children. Israel has also severely limited the movement of food, water, fuel, medicine and other essentials into Gaza. Bartov says the disproportionate killing of civilians by Israel, as well as dehumanizing statements by Israeli leaders and suggestions of mass expulsion, are of grave concern. He recently joined hundreds of lawyers and academics in signing an open letter warning about Israel’s violations of international law in Gaza. “There is an indication that there are war crimes happening in Gaza, potentially also crimes against humanity,” says Bartov. “If this so-called operation continues, that may become ethnic cleansing … and that may become genocide.”


This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: “If there is a hell on Earth, it’s the north of Gaza.” Those were the words of a U.N. official earlier today as Israel intensifies its aerial and ground assault. Tens of thousands of Palestinians have fled on foot from northern Gaza after being forcibly displaced by Israel’s attacks. More than half of all homes in Gaza have been destroyed or damaged over the last month.

On Thursday, the Biden administration announced Israel has agreed to implement what the White House described as daily four-hour pauses in areas of northern Gaza to give Palestinians a chance to head south. Many Palestinians fear they’ll never be allowed to return home. Some have accused the Biden administration of facilitating the ethnic cleansing of Gaza. Images of Palestinians fleeing on foot have been widely compared to the Nakba, or catastrophe, when some 700,000 Palestinians were violently expelled from their homes upon Israel’s founding in 1948.

We begin today’s show with the Israeli-born historian Omer Bartov, who recently signed an open letter warning of Israel committing a potential genocide in Gaza. Omer Bartov is a professor of Holocaust and genocide studies at Brown. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has cited him as one of the world’s leading specialists on the subject of genocide. Bartov is the author of numerous books, including, most recently, Genocide, the Holocaust and Israel-Palestine: First-Person History in Times of Crisis.

Democracy Now!'s Juan González and I spoke to professor Omer Bartov on Wednesday from his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. I began by asking him to talk about his own experience serving as an Israeli soldier in the northern Sinai in the 1970s and how it's impacted his view on what’s going on today.

OMER BARTOV: I was a soldier in the IDF, in the Israeli Defense Forces, between 1973 and 1976. And so, as a young soldier, the first thing that I experienced was the trauma, the huge surprise of the Arab — the Egyptian and Syrian attack on Israel on October 6th, 1973. And I should say that when the Hamas attack on Israel occurred on the 7th of October, 2023, 50 years and a day later, that was quite traumatic, I think, for myself and many members of my generation. And we can talk further about why it was so traumatic.

But in the course of my service, I also served in the northern Sinai, and the command post that I belonged to was in Gaza. And so I would go quite often to Gaza, which was then — had a population of about 350,000, was poor, hopeless and congested. And since then, of course, now we have between two and two-and-a-half million people living in Gaza, which is much poorer, much more congested and whose population is much more desperate, and has been desperate for a long time, considering that it’s been under Israeli siege now for 16 years. So, for me, the lack of progress for all those years in somehow resolving this terrible humanitarian problem is very personal.

And I should add one thing. I was usually not employed as a soldier in occupation duties, but there was a time that I was. And I have very distinct recollection of that, leading my platoon through an Egyptian city at the time, with people looking at us from behind the windows, obviously not wanting us to be there, obviously afraid of us, and us walking on the street obviously feeling uncomfortable being where we are and being somewhat afraid of what might happen to us as we were marching then. That sort of sense of what being an occupation soldier means stayed with me all those years, and it’s always made me — has been one of the reasons, a sort of more personal rather than political or analytical reason, why I’ve always thought that it’s time to end this occupation, for which we called in that August 4th petition, two months before the Hamas attack on Israel.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Professor, I’m wondering — we hear often now these days, especially in conflicts such as these, the terms “crime against humanity,” “war crime,” “genocide.” Most people don’t understand the distinction. And for some of us, war itself is a crime, and saying a “war crime” is almost redundant. But I’m wondering if you could give us more of a guidance or sense of the distinction between these terms.

OMER BARTOV: Yes. So, I think that’s a really important question, because people, as you say, just use these terms without really thinking what they mean. And because genocide is perceived as the worst crime, then any atrocity that happens, anything that people think deserves some sort of extreme title, they call genocide.

So, there are actually U.N. resolutions on war crimes and on genocide, and they define them clearly. Now, one can dispute those definitions, but those are the definitions under international law. The convention, the U.N. Convention on Genocide, so, 1948, defines it as the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group as such. And that’s a very important definition, because it calls for two things. It calls, first of all, for intention — you have to show that the killing is intentional, is not just part of war, part of violence, but is intentional — and, second, that the intention is to destroy that group, defined as such by the perpetrator as such. That is, it’s not the killing of individuals; it’s the killing of individuals as members of a particular group.

That’s very different from war crimes, because war crimes are violations of the laws and customs of war against both combatants and noncombatants, civilians. And crimes against humanity has to do with extermination or other mass crimes against any civilian population. You do not have to show intent, and it does not have to happen at a time of war. So, it is important to distinguish between these these three categories.

And I would add to it a third, which has a definition, although there is no resolution on it, which is ethnic cleansing. Ethnic cleansing is the attempt to remove a population from a particular territory, usually because you want that territory, and you don’t want the people living on it to stay on it. Genocide is the attempt to kill a particular group, wherever it is. But there is a connection between the two, because often ethnic cleansing becomes genocide. That happened, in fact, in the Armenian genocide in World War I, and it happened, in fact, also in the Holocaust, which began as an attempt to remove Jews from particular territories, and then, when the Germans felt there was no place to move them to, they decided to murder them en masse. So, if we think about these different categories, we can distinguish between what we see on the ground and how we feel about it.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And your sense of what is happening in terms of these categories right now in Gaza?

OMER BARTOV: So, my sense is the following. Israeli political leaders and military leaders have made very startling and frightening statements about Gaza, speaking about flattening Gaza, speaking about Hamas, but by sort of extending it also, by extension, also Gazans, in general, as human animals, speaking about moving the entire population of Gaza out of Gaza. That is a clear intention of ethnic cleansing. So, those statements show intent. And that’s a genocidal intent, which is often very difficult to prove in genocide. People who carry out genocide don’t always want to say that they’re doing it.

The second is: What are they actually doing there? And military leaders on the ground keep saying that what they’re trying to do is to hit Hamas targets, that Hamas often — and I think that’s often true — places its own headquarters, rockets and so forth under hospitals, inside mosques, playgrounds, schools and so forth. So the military claim that they’re trying to hit Hamas and not the population, but, unfortunately, the population is also getting killed. In that sense, there is clearly disproportionate killing of civilians. That is, the numbers, as you quoted earlier, are now estimated to be over 10,000. And even if we don’t believe the numbers given out by Hamas, they’re still in the many thousands. They may even be more, because many bodies are probably buried under the debris. And of those, at least 4,000 are children. And one has to remember that half of the population of Gaza is under 18 years old. So, to me, there is an indication that there are war crimes happening in Gaza, potentially also crimes against humanity.

Whether at the moment this is genocide, my own sense is that it is not genocide at the moment, because there is still no clear indication of an attempt to destroy the entire population, which would be genocide, but that we are very close on the verge of that. And if this so-called operation continues, that may become ethnic cleansing — in part, it’s already happened with the move of so many Palestinians from northern Gaza to southern Gaza — and that may become genocide.

AMY GOODMAN: Professor Omer Bartov, I was really struck by you saying it was in August that you joined other leading historians and Israeli scholars in signing this letter criticizing the, quote, “regime of apartheid.” So, that is two months before Hamas attack of October 7th. Now, often these days, after the attack that killed over 1,300 people in Israel, if you raise any kind of context, you’re accused of justifying what happened. If you, as a historian, can talk about your use of that term? I remember years ago interviewing the Nobel laureate Archbishop Tutu in South Africa. And he said, when he went to the Occupied Territories, he found it worse than apartheid in his own country of South Africa, which he survived. So, your clearly thought-out use of this term, and then a discussion about what it means to try to explain what’s happening, including using the term “occupation”?

OMER BARTOV: So, let me say, when we crafted that statement, and we worked on it quite a bit in July and finally issued it, so-called “The Elephant in the Room,” the elephant in the room that we were talking about was the occupation, and which we defined as — in the West Bank, as a regime of apartheid. Now, the reason we did it at the time was that, if you remember, there were vast protests in Israel at the time against the Netanyahu government, the Netanyahu government attempt to so-called overhaul the judicial system, which was really an attempt to undermine the rule of law in Israel to strengthen the executive and weaken the judiciary, which is the only control over the executive in Israel, with the goal of extending the occupation regime in the West Bank and, finally, of annexing that area and making life impossible for the Palestinian population there. There are over half a million Jewish settlers there and somewhere around 3 million Palestinians living there.

Now, what do we mean by “apartheid”? First of all, people tend to think of apartheid as what happened in South Africa. And the term comes from there. But there is, in fact, a U.N. resolution on apartheid that defines what apartheid is. And curiously, all the elements that are mentioned in that resolution exist also in the West Bank, the most important of which is that you have two populations in the West Bank, Jews and Palestinians. The Jews, the settlers, are extraterritorial Israeli citizens. They live under Israeli law, or some kind of figment that creates them as living under Israeli law. They can vote to the Israeli parliament. They enjoy all the rights of democracy the Jews in Israel enjoy. The Palestinians live — the Palestinians there live under a completely different set of laws, which gives them almost no rights at all. That is, they live under a military regime. They are tried before military courts, where the judges are lawyers on reserve service, Israeli lawyers on reserve service. One can detain them endlessly in prison. And so, these are two groups that live under totally different laws. They’re also separated from each other by a set of roads, roadblocks, checkposts, that make life increasingly difficult for Palestinians and make life much better for the Jewish population there. So, from that point of view, there’s clearly an apartheid regime in the West Bank.

And that has, in many ways, filtered into Israel. That is, generation after generation of young Israeli men and women are called up and go to serve as policemen in the West Bank in military uniform. Most of what they do is police the population. And that has a corrupting impact on more and more generations of Israelis, who get used to the idea that they can break into homes at 4:00 in the morning, arrest whoever they like. And so, that effect is not only that we have an apartheid regime, but we have a corruption of democracy in Israel itself, which ultimately resulted in this attempt by Netanyahu’s regime to change the very system of democracy in Israel, which was really only for Jews in the first place.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Professor, I’m wondering if you — you mentioned previously the acquiescence or the refusal to confront the problem in general Israeli society of the occupation? Why do you think that is, especially given the fact that Israel in its early years had a very vibrant labor, socialist and humanitarian movement among those who who created the state of Israel? What has happened?

OMER BARTOV: Well, I would say, I mean, the simple answer is that power corrupts, and that Israel has suffered for years from a kind of euphoria of power. And when I talked about the sort of link between what happened in 1973 and what happened in 2023, it is exactly that — that is, that Israel came to believe that it’s strong enough to be able to do what it likes, and it does not need to have any political compromise, which means territorial compromise. The War of 1973 could have been avoided, had Israel agreed to negotiate with Anwar Sadat at the time, the president of Egypt — which it did, eventually, after the war — and return the Sinai Peninsula and receive peace in return. But 3,000 Israeli soldiers were killed, some of whom were my classmates. And the same happened now. That is, Israel refused to talk about any territorial compromise and believed that Hamas can lob a few rockets here and there, but, by and large, it’s not a problem for it, and therefore, there’s no need to think of any territorial compromise.

And this, you know, became the sense in the large sectors of the Israeli public. People could live in Tel Aviv, have a good time, have a good life. And 20 miles to their east, there was an apartheid regime, but it really had very little to do with them. And the curious thing was — and this is what we were trying to point out in August — was that the people who were protesting, the hundreds of thousands of Israelis who, quite remarkably, went out to the streets every Saturday to protest against the erosion of democracy in Israel, refused to talk about the occupation. And when I was there protesting against that, we were marginalized. We were pushed to the side. And people said, “Well, occupation, that’s a kind of — that’s a difficult term. You know, not everybody agrees on that. Let’s not talk about it now. It will divert attention,” whereas, in fact, it was the core of the very attempt to change the rules of the game in Israel.

AMY GOODMAN: In a moment, we’ll return to our interview with Omer Bartov, professor of Holocaust and genocide studies at Brown University. The Israeli American scholar has been described by the U.S. Holocaust Museum as one of the world’s leading specialists on the subject of genocide. Back in 20 seconds.

Watch the interview at 

Nagorno-Karabakh: What Next?

Nov 9 2023

Hrair Balian

Opinion

On Sept. 19, while world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly in New York deliberated about international cooperation, rule of law, human rights, and the peaceful resolution of disputes, halfway around the world, in the mountains of the South Caucasus, an Azerbaijani offensive set the stage for the ethnic cleansing of Armenians from their ancestral land of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The 24-hour military offensive was preceded by an Azerbaijani blockade of the Lachin Corridor, which connects Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia and is vital for the supply of essential goods. Over the course of nine months, the blockade resulted in severe shortages of food, medicine, electricity, and fuel. Azerbaijan repeatedly ignored calls from the international community, including the International Court of Justice, to reopen the corridor and end the siege.

Populated by ethnic Armenians, Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Soviet Azerbaijan in 1991, shortly before the collapse of the Soviet Union. Following a 1994 ceasefire that ended a bloody war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the OSCE Minsk Group — co-chaired by France, the Russian Federation, and the United States — hosted talks between the two countries. The disputed territory was self-governed for the next 30 years but continued to be internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan.

In 2007, an OSCE mediation effort produced the original set of Basic Principles to end the conflict on the basis of an interim status for Nagorno-Karabakh, providing guarantees for security and self-governance until the drafting of a comprehensive final settlement. The Basic Principles are grounded in the Helsinki Final Act of 1975 — namely, non-use of force, territorial integrity, and equal rights and self-determination of peoples.

Within 10 days of the Sept. 19 Azerbaijani offensive, over 100,000 Armenians fled Nagorno-Karabakh and found refuge in neighboring Armenia. By the time the first U.N. mission in 35 years of violent conflict arrived in Stepanakert, the capital of the enclave, only between 50 and 1,000 ethnic Armenians remained in Nagorno-Karabakh, according to the U.N.

In Yerevan, Armenia’s capital, the shock of losing Nagorno-Karabakh brought angry protesters to Republic Square, who demanded to know the culprits responsible for the debacle.

Fingers pointed first to Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for essentially abandoning Nagorno-Karabakh. Next to blame were Russian President Vladimir Putin as well as Russian peacekeeping forces for standing aside and even tacitly approving Azerbaijan’s offensive. Western institutions and governments, particularly the U.S. and the European Union, were on the blame list as well for failing to deter Azerbaijan’s aggression.

But what can be done now to prevent a further escalation of the conflict while the international community’s attention is diverted to the latest war between Israel and Hamas?

Protection of Refugees

Urgent humanitarian needs in Armenia must be addressed first. The 100,000 refugees there need shelter, food, health care, schooling, and emotional support to preserve a modicum of dignity. They must be designated as “refugees,” and the UNHCR must be invited to provide urgent assistance. Armenia needs international support to care for the refugees, and the international community has a responsibility to provide protection and aid to them.

Additionally, the refugees’ right to return to Nagorno-Karabakh must be preserved. However, the hollow rhetoric and bare minimum terms Azerbaijan has offered for the return of Armenians are insufficient. Concrete measures must be established for Armenians to enjoy meaningful autonomy and minority rights under international monitoring and protection. Moreover, it is incumbent upon the international community to ensure that the homes and belongings these refugees abandoned are not destroyed, confiscated, looted, or otherwise damaged.

The 50 to 1,000 Armenians left in Nagorno-Karabakh — most of them elderly, sick, or injured, according to the U.N. mission — must be provided protection by the deployment of international eyes and ears, human rights monitors, and reporters. These monitors must be allowed to visit remote areas of the enclave where rumors of massacres and mass graves have emerged, before the evidence is destroyed.

Beyond the urgent humanitarian needs, Armenia also needs massive international economic assistance. Otherwise, the country risks succumbing to internal turmoil.

Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War (POWs)

 According to Azerbaijan’s prosecutor general, 300 former authority leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh are wanted for alleged war crimes committed during the three wars unleashed on the enclave. Already, some have been detained, humiliated in front of cameras, and transferred to Baku prisons.

These leaders must be freed immediately, at the very least as a confidence-building measure. The international community — in particular the U.S. and the EU as mediators, as well as the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair countries — has an obligation to persuade Azerbaijan to free them unconditionally. Additionally, during the September assault, Azerbaijan detained several Armenian prisoners of war, who joined the unknown number of POWs that have remained in Azerbaijani custody since the 2020 war. Now that the war is over, the POWs must be freed immediately in accordance with the Geneva Conventions.

Robust Border Monitoring

A robust monitoring mission, larger than the current EU mission, must be deployed urgently along the entire border of Armenia and Azerbaijan to prevent further aggression from the latter. The 25-year OSCE experience with mediation between Armenia and Azerbaijan could help complement the EU monitoring mission. In this context, it would be important for the OSCE to adopt a budget and decide by consensus to assume a role here.

The mission must ideally have security enforcement powers. The alternative to monitors with enforcement powers is arming Armenia with defensive weapons to remedy the asymmetry of forces and prepare for a potential Azerbaijani offensive in southern Armenia. Currently, Armenia cannot stand against the vastly superior armed forces of Azerbaijan, which has received supplies from Russia, Belarus, Turkey, and Israel.

Need for Impartial Mediation

The U.S. and the EU have expressed regret and disappointment for the failure to restrain Azerbaijan. It is too late for such regrets in Nagorno-Karabakh. However, time is of the essence for political support to Armenia.

For the past year, the U.S. and the EU have mediated peace talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Following the ethnic cleansing of Nagorno-Karabakh, two priority points of contention remain between the two countries: (1) delineating Armenia’s borders with Azerbaijan before the latter uses force again to pursue irredentist claims on sovereign Armenian territories, and (2) blocking Azerbaijani demands, supported by Turkey, to connect eastern Azerbaijan with its landlocked Nakhichevan exclave — an autonomous republic that is part of Azerbaijan but not connected to the mainland — via a “corridor” through the Syunik region in southern Armenian.

Azerbaijan bases its demand on Article 9 of the agreement that ended the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh. However, that agreement is null and void following Azerbaijan’s resumption of war on Sept. 19. Any such passage through sovereign Armenian territory must be subject to negotiations and mutually beneficial agreement.

Since 2022, U.S. and EU mediators have supported Azerbaijan’s interpretation of international norms regarding Nagorno-Karabakh’s status, disregarding the evolution of relevant laws in recent cases for Kosovo and East Timor that argued in favor of self-determination when minority rights are breached. This happened largely due to growing Western dependence on Azerbaijan for gas supplies.

Moreover, because of these hydrocarbon interests and the West’s failure to impose consequences, including economic sanctions, for repeated Azerbaijani infringements against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan’s hereditary President Ilham Aliyev has felt empowered to use aggression, signaling that power counts more than international norms. To do no further harm, future Western mediation between Armenia and Azerbaijan cannot continue the same favoritism.

Beyond the U.S. and EU mediation, Russia has also convened summits between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which are ongoing in various formats. Considering Russia’s tacit acquiescence with the Azerbaijani aggression, Armenia is a reluctant participant in these meetings. The U.S. and the EU must mitigate in deeds and not just rhetoric the risks inherent in this rival mediation process.

Beyond the immediate mediation needs, reaching an end of conflict and sustainable peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan requires measures to address a legacy of conflict and abuse that have caused deep wounds in both countries.

  

*Hrair Balian has practiced conflict resolution for the past 35 years in the Middle East, Africa, the Balkans, Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, and Central Asia. He has served in leadership positions with the U.N., OSCE, and NGOs, including the Carter Center (Director, Conflict Resolution, 2008-2022). He has taught conflict resolution, negotiation, and mediation at Emory University’s School of Law (2008-2018) and Georgia Institute of Technology’s Sam Nunn School of International Affairs (2023).

 

Armenpress: Armenian Foreign Minister discuss regional issues with French officials

 11:40,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan in Paris exchanged views with the Minister of Foreign Affairs of France Catherine Colonna, and Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo.

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said in a post on X.

''On the margins of 6th Paris Peace Conference had a chance to briefly exchange with France FM Catherine Colonna and Anne Hidalgo. Enhanced agenda of cooperation between Armenia and France as well as region issues are part of our continuous political dialogue,'' posted Mirzoyan.

ICJ to deliver its Order on provisional measures against Azerbaijan submitted by Armenia on Nov. 17

 12:06,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS.  On Friday 17 November 2023, the International Court of Justice will deliver its Order on the Request for the indication of provisional measures submitted by Armenia in the case concerning Application of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Armenia v. Azerbaijan), the press service of ICJ reports.

Judge Joan Donoghue, President of the Court will deliver  the Order on Friday 17 November 2023.

300 delegates from about 50 countries to arrive in Armenia, preparations for the OSCE PA session launched

 12:35,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. In a few days, Yerevan will become the main platform of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, the National Assembly of Armenia said.

300 delegates from around 50 countries will arrive in Armenia. The host party is the National Assembly.

The 21st Autumn Meeting of the OSCE PA will be held 18 – 20 November in Yerevan, Armenia.

Iranian President Raisi urges Islamic leaders to reach firm decision on Palestine

 14:45,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi has called on the leaders of Islamic countries to reach a firm decision on the issue of Palestine and fully implement it.

Speaking before departing Tehran on Saturday morning to attend the extraordinary meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Raisi emphasized the importance of concrete actions, reports the Iranian news agency IRNA.

“It is expected that the heads of Islamic countries will reach a firm decision on the issue of Palestine, which is the most important issue in the world, and the decision will be fully implemented,” he said, calling for action instead of paying lip service to the Palestinian issue.

As IRNA reports, Raisi noted that Palestine is the reason behind the establishment of the OIC, adding that an immediate halt to Israeli bombardment of Gaza, opening of a way to help the people of Gaza, lifting the blockade of the enclave, and realization of Gaza’s rights are the main goals of the organization.

Ambassadors accredited to Armenia visit Matenadaran

 15:18,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. Arayik Khzmalyan, the director of Mashtots Matenadaran and the deputy director Vahe Torosyan hosted the Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Czech Republic, Kazakhstan and Poland to the Republic of Armenia-Petr Piruncik, Bolat Imanbaev, Pavel Cheplak, the press service of the Matenadaran informs.

The heads of diplomatic missions, accompanied by the Matenadaran directorate, toured the museum. The possibilities of implementing joint programs were also discussed.