Exhibition dedicated to General Hakob Zadik opened in Romanian Chamber of Deputies

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 13:59, 4 April 2023

YEREVAN, APRIL 4, ARMENPRESS. On April 3 in Bucharest the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan met with Vasile-Daniel Suciu, the Vice-Chairman of the Chamber of Deputies of Romania.

The interlocutors discussed issues of activation of parliamentary ties between the two countries and the organization of regular visits. Both sides emphasized the importance of developing cooperation between Armenia and Romania based on the historical and cultural commonalities between the two peoples and the existing potential, the foreign ministry reported.

After the meeting, Ararat Mirzoyan and Vasile-Daniel Suciu took part in the opening ceremony of the exhibition dedicated to the famous Romanian figure of Armenian descent, general Hakob Zadik (Iacob Zadik), held in the Chamber of Deputies. During the event, Varuzhan Pambukchyan, a Member of the Parliament of Romania, Chairman of the Group of National Minorities, and Varuzhan Voskanyan, First Vice-President of the Writers’ Union of Romania, Chairman of the Union of Armenians of Romania, gave remarks. The contribution of representatives of the Romanian-Armenian community to the socio-political, scientific, educational and cultural life of Romania during different periods of time was highlighted, one of the vivid examples of which is the activity of general Hakob Zadik, who was honoured by Romania and other countries.

Remark: On December 16, 2019, during the solemn reception held in the Chamber of Deputies of Romania on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Union of Armenians of Romania, the latter, as a sign of centuries-old Armenian-Romanian friendship, donated a khachkar (cross-stone) to the Romanian Parliament, which is installed in one of the halls of the Parliament.

Nagorno Karabakh says outbound travel possible only for highly essential cases

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 13:22, 5 April 2023

STEPANAKERT, APRIL 5, ARMENPRESS. The State Minister of Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) Gurgen Nersisyan has denied reports claiming that Russian peacekeepers are evacuating the population of Artsakh and transferring large numbers of people to Armenia.

Furthermore, Nersisyan said that from now on travel from Artsakh to Armenia will be possible only for highly essential cases.

“From now on, traveling from Artsakh to Armenia will be possible only in highly essential cases and exclusively through applying in advance to the Center for Cooperation with the Russian Peacekeeping Contingent and with their permission.

Since Azerbaijan’s blockade of the only road linking Artsakh with Armenia, the Armenians of Artsakh were deprived for a long time of the possibility to travel to Armenia from Artsakh.

Given the constant issues people face in their lives, such as death of a relative in Armenia, funeral, severe illness of a family member in Armenia in case of separated families, surgery and others, and the growth of tension, the Russian peacekeepers recently began transporting in a certain intervals the citizens who are facing such issues.

In order to keep the abovementioned process under control and protect our citizens from possible Azerbaijani provocations in the blockaded part of the road, from now on it will be possible to travel from Artsakh to Armenia only in highly essential cases, naturally through the Russian peacekeepers, exclusively by applying in advance to the Center for Cooperation with the Russian peacekeeping contingent and with their permission. Regarding people with health issues requiring medical attention, their transfer to Armenia will be organized through the Artsakh representation of the International Committee of the Red Cross, with recommendation of the healthcare ministry of Artsakh.

At the same time, we inform that the reports claiming that the Russian peacekeepers are evacuating or transporting en masse the Artsakhians to Armenia are untrue, these reports are yet another manifestation of the Azerbaijani information attacks,” Nersisyan said.

Senator Bob Menendez’s approach to a foreign policy based on the rule of law: A model to emulate

Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) condemns Turkey’s support for Azerbaijan’s attacks on Artsakh and asks Secretary of State nominee Antony Blinken, “Are you clear-eyed about Turkey under Erdogan?”

The following exchange between Senator Bob Menendez and Secretary of State Antony Blinken on March 22, 2023 exemplifies the Foreign Relations Committee chairman’s uncompromising commitment to human rights and the rule of law:

Senator Menendez: “What do you call a country: That violates another country’s airspace and territorial waters without provocation?

Drills in another country’s Exclusive Economic Zone?

Buys Russian military equipment in violation of US law?

That has more lawyers and journalists in jail than almost any other country and jails its main political opponent, right before elections?

That seeks by force to block the rights of an EU country to explore its energy deposits off its outer continental shelf?

Has not only NOT joined EU-led sanctions against Russia but HAS exported roughly $800 million worth of goods to Russia?

That continues airstrikes in Iraq and Syria, including against US partners like the Syrian Democratic forces?

That stopped the critical enlargement of NATO?

That continues to occupy an EU country with 40,000 troops and, in violation of UN Security Council Resolutions, seeks to open up an area that the United Nations has frozen?

That denies religious freedom to the religious leader of millions of citizens of the Greek Orthodox faith?

That converts a church into a mosque in violation of its UNESCO commitments?

That arrests and jails US Embassy locally employed staff?”

Blinken: “I think I will call that a challenging ally.”

Menendez: “Well, I call the country Turkey. And the reality is that I don’t believe that such a country deserves to have F-16s sold to it.”

The State Department must accept responsibility for Turkey’s current state. US officials appeasing the Turks over the years made them feel invincible.

Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon official, traced the US’ appeasement of Turkey and its adverse effects to 1974 when Henry Kissinger “green-lighted” the Turkish invasion of Cyprus.

“No matter their provocation, Turkish leaders now believe that Washington will defer to their size and throw any smaller country under the bus. Not only does the northern part of Cyprus, therefore, remain Europe’s last occupied territory, but Erdogan now believes force might win him possession of Greece’s Aegean islands,” he wrote.

“It will take crippling sanctions on Turkey…and further US deployments in the Eastern Mediterranean to right historical wrongs and deter new conflict,” Rubin stressed.

Menendez denounced Turkey for not acknowledging the Armenian Genocide. He condemned Azerbaijan’s aggression on Nagorno-Karabakh and Turkey for supporting Baku and enabling the massacre of innocent Armenian civilians.

Senator Menendez’s foreign policy approach, which goes beyond the Eastern Mediterranean and the South Caucasus, should be an example to emulate. It is morally right and in America’s paramount national interest to protect an international order based on the rule of law. The United States must hold on to this supreme interest and not relinquish it to other less critical considerations or short-term strategic objectives. Turkey’s aggression is a frightening example of what can happen when states believe they can defy international law and violate human rights.

Tony Antoniou is a social science educator from Queens, New York


Azerbaijani Forces Block Goris-Stepanakert Highway

A new road will connect Armenia to the Lachin Corridor, which still remains blockaded

Azerbaijani forces have blocked a stretch of the Goris-Stepanakert highway that runs between the Aghavno and Tegh villages of Berdzor, which fell under Azerbaijani occupation last summer months before construction on a new road was completed. Azerbaijani media began spreading misinformation, claiming that the country’s forces had made advances in both Armenia and Artsakh.

Artsakh’s Interior Ministry on Thursday said that construction of a new road connecting Armenia to the Lachin Corridor was completed. That road goes through Kornidzor in Armenia’s Syunik Province and connects to Hin Shen in Artsakh. Road construction is also being completed on the Tegh-Kornidzor road.

The Tegh-Kornidzor road is functional and given the ongoing blockade of Artsakh can be used for humanitarian supplies traffic by Russian peacekeepers and the International Committee of the Red Cross, the authorities added.  The road will be controlled by the Russian peacekeepers near the Hakari river bridge.

The Lachin Corridor has been blocked by Azerbaijan since 12 December 2022.

Armenia’s National Security Service also issued a statement Thursday saying that beginning on April 1 the road connecting the territory of the Republic of Armenia to the Lachin Corridor will pass through the Kornidzor-Tegh route, only through the territory of the Republic of Armenia.

After August 2022, a part of the road connecting the Lachin Corridor to the Republic of Armenia again passed through the territory of Azerbaijan after the Kornidzor Bridge. That part of the road along its entire length and its adjacent territory was controlled by the Russian peacekeeping forces.

According to the agreements reached earlier between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the border guards of the two countries were to be deployed on both sides of the border along the aforementioned section in the last days of March.

The National Security Service said that in some places, the Azerbaijani side, without waiting for pre-determined adjustments, had started to position itself and began carrying out engineering works.

Armenia said that there are five such points, where the Azerbaijani side has set up border posts 100 to 300 meters away from its border. “It has now been agreed that cartographers from both sides will correct the situation,” Armenia NSS said in its statement, without elaborating on when the decisions were made between the two sides.

“The Armenian army did not have positions in the area in question, because positions are not located on the border line, but on the nearby strategic heights. And the protection of that part of the border should be transferred to the border guard troops, according to the agreement,” added the NSS.

Economic Activity Index grows 10,9% in January-February

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 12:45,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 27, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s economic activity index grew 10,9% in January and February of 2023 compared to the same period of 2022, according to official data released by the Statistical Committee.

Industrial output in the two months of 2023 grew 1% compared to the same period of the previous year. Construction grew 13,2%.

Trade turnover increased 18% while services increased 23.5%. 

The Consumer Price Index grew 8,1%. Meanwhile, the Industrial Product Price Index grew 0,8%.

Electrical energy production dropped 0,2%.

A 77,7% growth was recorded in the foreign trade volumes compared to the same two months of last year. Exports and imports grew 96,4% and 67,4% respectively.

Artsakh Accuses Azerbaijan of Further Tightening Blockade

Russian peacekeeping forces at the Lachin Corridor


The Artsakh Foreign Ministry on Monday accused Baku of attempting to further tighten the blockade this time cutting off roads between Stepanakert to a number of villages in the Shushi region, in addition to the closure of the Lachin Corridor, which has been shut to traffic since December 12.

“Azerbaijan is trying to justify its illegal actions and provocations with fabricated statements that do not correspond to reality,” the Artsakh Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The foreign ministry was responding to Azerbaijan’s breach of the November 9, 2020 agreement after its armed forces crossed the line of contact and advanced their positions on Artsakh’s territory along the Stepanakert-Ghaibalishen-Lisagor road.

“Azerbaijan’s actions to tighten the ring around Artsakh are an arrogant response to the decision of the International Court of Justice calling for the immediate unblocking of the Lachin Corridor connecting Artsakh with Armenia, and a challenge to the international legal order,” the Artsakh Foreign Ministry said.

“The Republic of Artsakh expects the Russian peacekeeping forces to take practical steps to eliminate the consequences of Azerbaijan’s repeated violation of the provisions of the tripartite statement of November 9, 2020 and prevent new possible violations,” added the statement.

“In such conditions, it is imperative for the international community to adopt a united tough position to force Azerbaijan to return to the legal framework and fulfill its international obligations. The international community and, in particular, the UN Security Council should take concrete collective steps aimed at the immediate opening of the Lachin Corridor and curbing Azerbaijan’s genocidal policy,” the Artsakh Foreign Ministry said.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/21/2023

                                        Tuesday, March 21, 2023
Aliyev Rejects U.S. Calls For Lifting Of Karabakh Road Blockade
March 21, 2023
Nagorno-Karabakh - Azerbaijani protesters block Nagorno-Karabakh's only land 
link with Armenia, December 26, 2022.
In a phone call with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev reportedly dismissed on Tuesday U.S. calls for an end to 
the three-month blockade of the sole highway connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to 
Armenia.
“Secretary Blinken encouraged finding solutions to outstanding issues and 
underscored that there is no military solution,” said Vedant Patel, a spokesman 
for the U.S. State Department. “He reaffirmed the importance of reopening the 
Lachin corridor to commercial and private vehicles.”
According to an official Azerbaijani readout of the call, Aliyev again claimed 
that the corridor was not blocked by Azerbaijani government-backed protesters 
and described reports to the contrary as “false Armenian propaganda.” He said 
that Russian peacekeepers and the International Committee of the Red Cross have 
escorted thousands of vehicles through that road over the last three months.
Aliyev again accused Armenia of shipping military personnel and weapons to 
Karabakh and said that an Azerbaijani checkpoint must be set up at the corridor.
Yerevan has rejected such demands, saying that they run counter to the terms of 
the Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani war. 
It has also strongly denied any military supplies to Karabakh.
Armenia - U.S. Ambassador Kristina Kvien visits an Armenian border checkpoint 
leading to the Lachin corridor, March 10, 2023.
The United States has repeatedly called on Baku to lift the road blockade that 
has caused serious shortages of food, medicine and other essential items in 
Karabakh. The U.S. ambassador in Yerevan, Kristina Kvien, made a point of 
visiting an Armenian border checkpoint leading to the Lachin earlier this month.
“The Lachin corridor should be opened immediately,” Kvien tweeted during the 
trip.
Blinken phoned Aliyev one day after speaking to Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian. He told both leaders that Washington remains committed to helping the 
two South Caucasus nations reach a “sustainable peace.”
The top U.S. diplomat organized and mediated the most recent meeting between 
Aliyev and Pashinian held in Munich on February 18. Louis Bono, a U.S. special 
envoy for Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks, visited Baku and Yerevan afterwards.
In a March 7 interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, Bono made clear that the 
U.S. is not considering imposing sanctions on Baku because of the blockade.
During his phone conversation with Blinken, Pashinian expressed concern over 
“Azerbaijan’s increasingly aggressive rhetoric.” He and other Armenian officials 
have repeatedly accused Azerbaijan this month of planning a “new military 
aggression” against Armenia and Karabakh.
Aliyev on Tuesday blamed the Armenian side for increased ceasefire violations 
reported from the conflict zone in recent weeks.
Senior Prosecutor Set To Become Armenia’s Rights Defender
March 21, 2023
Armenia - Deputy Prosecutor-General Anahit Manasian.
The ruling Civil Contract party said on Tuesday that Deputy Prosecutor-General 
Anahit Manasian will be its candidate for the vacant post of Armenia’s state 
human rights defender.
The party’s parliamentary group revealed the nomination two months after the 
unexpected resignation of the previous ombudswoman, Kristine Grigorian. The 
latter said she is planning to move on to another job.
In line with the Armenian constitution, Grigorian’s successor will be appointed 
by the parliament controlled by Civil Contract.
None of the two opposition groups represented in the National Assembly has 
nominated its own candidate for the post so far.
Manasian, 34, was appointed as a deputy prosecutor-general less than five months 
ago. She previously worked as a deputy rector of Armenia’s Justice Academy and 
an adviser to two former chairmen of the Constitutional Court. She has also 
taught constitutional law at Yerevan State University since 2015.
More Yerevan Officials Arrested
March 21, 2023
        • Narine Ghalechian
Armenia - The Yerevan municipality building.
Two more senior local government officials in Yerevan were arrested on Tuesday 
four days after the resignation of Mayor Hrachya Sargsian.
One of them, Davit Dallakian, is the acting head of the Yerevan municipality’s 
architecture and urban development department, while the other, Seyran 
Mejlumian, served as the chief of the municipality staff until this week.
Mejlumian tendered his resignation right after Sargsian, who had appointed him 
to that position, stepped down on Friday.
Armenia’s Anti-Corruption Committee (ACC), which made the arrests, refused to 
reveal what the two men are accused or suspected of. The law-enforcement agency 
said only that the arrests are not connected with criminal proceedings launched 
by it against Deputy Mayor Gevorg Simonian.
Simonian, who previously worked as a deputy minister of health, was arrested ten 
days ago on charges stemming from what the ACC described as misuse of government 
funds provided for the fight against COVID-19. Also arrested was the head of a 
private clinic accused of defrauding the Armenian government of 119 million 
drams ($305,000) in 2020 and 2021. Both men deny the charges.
It was not immediately clear whether ACC investigators have also questioned 
Sargsian. The ex-mayor did not return phone calls or answer written questions 
sent by RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.
Armenia - Former Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian attends a session of 
Yerevan's municipal assembly, September 23, 2022.
Sargsian’s resignation is widely seen as being part of the ruling political 
team’s preparations for municipal elections that are due to be held in Yerevan 
in September. Voters in the Armenian capital will elect a new municipal council 
empowered to appoint the city’s mayor.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party has nominated Tigran 
Avinian, another deputy mayor, as its mayoral candidate. According to some 
observers, Pashinian and his entourage hope that Sargsian’s resignation will 
boost Avinian’s chances in the upcoming elections.
In a Facebook post, Avinian commented on the ACC’s “recent actions in the 
municipality,” saying that he expects a “full and comprehensive” inquiry. He 
also urged all municipal employees to “sober up” and serve only “the interests 
of Yerevan and Yerevan’s citizens.”
Armenia Sees Closer Ties With Iran
March 21, 2023
Iran - Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian make statements to the press, Tehran, November 1, 2022.
Armenia hopes to broaden its relations with neighboring Iran, Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian said on Tuesday when he congratulated the top Iranian leaders on 
Nowruz, the ancient Persian New Year.
Armenian-Iranian ties remain of “special importance” to the Armenian government, 
Pashinian said in a congratulatory message to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah 
Ali Khamenei.
“I sincerely hope that in the near future we will witness the expansion of our 
bilateral multi-layered agenda, which will become a stimulus for the further 
deepening of our friendly relations for the benefit of the well-being of the 
Armenian and Iranian peoples and regional peace,” he wrote.
In a separate message to Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, Pashinian expressed 
confidence that Yerevan and Tehran “will give a new rise” to that agenda this 
year.
Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri Kani announced, meanwhile, that he is 
heading to Yerevan for a two-day visit. He said Tehran is “strengthening the 
neighborhood policy and prioritizing the Caucasus.”
Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian met with his Armenian 
counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan in Geneva late last month. Amir-Abdollahian 
reaffirmed his country’s strong support for Armenia’s territorial integrity and 
opposition to “geopolitical changes” in the region.
Iranian leaders have repeatedly made such statements over the past year amid 
Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations on restoring transport links between the two 
South Caucasus states.
Such links are envisaged by the Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the 2020 
war in Nagorno-Karabakh. The deal specifically commits Yerevan to opening rail 
and road links between Azerbaijan and its Nakhichevan exclave.
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev regularly demands an exterritorial land 
corridor that would pass through Syunik, the sole Armenian province bordering 
Iran. Armenian leaders maintain that Azerbaijani citizens and cargo cannot be 
exempt from Armenian border controls.
Iran has warned Azerbaijan against attempting to strip the Islamic Republic of 
the common border and transport links with Armenia.
Armenian Parliament Refuses To Back Karabakh Self-Determination
March 21, 2023
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Deputies from the ruling Civil Contract party attend a session of the 
National Assembly, Yerevan, March 21, 2023.
The Armenian parliament rejected on Tuesday an opposition proposal to speak out 
against Azerbaijani control over Nagorno-Karabakh and to voice support for the 
Karabakh Armenians’ right to self-determination.
The main opposition Hayastan alliance drafted a relevant parliamentary statement 
on the 100th day of Azerbaijan’s continuing blockade of the Lachin corridor. The 
document says Baku’s actions show that Karabakh cannot be a part of Azerbaijan 
and that self-determination of its ethnic Armenian population is the only way to 
ensure its security.
The parliamentary majority representing the ruling Civil Contract party refused 
to even debate the opposition initiative during an ongoing session of the 
National Assembly. According to Artsvik Minasian, a senior Hayastan lawmaker, 
its leaders objected to the draft statement’s references to “the 
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic” and self-determination.
The rebuff sparked bitter recriminations and insults between pro-government and 
opposition deputies.
Armenia - Opposition deputy Andranik Tevanian addresses the parliament, Yerevan, 
March 21, 2023.
Hayastan’s Andranik Tevanian accused the ruling party of breaking its 2021 
election campaign pledge to strive for Karabakh’s self-determination in the 
international arena.
“Dear compatriots, they have fooled you because in their pre-election program 
they pledged to seek the realization of Artsakh’s right to self-determination,” 
Tevanian charged, appealing to voters.
Civil Contract’s parliamentary leader, Hayk Konjorian, responded by alleging 
that Hayastan’s top leader, former President Robert Kocharian, himself had been 
ready to recognize Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh.
The pro-government majority already blocked in December a similar resolution put 
forward by Hayastan and the second parliamentary opposition force, Pativ Unem.
Successive Armenian governments had for decades championed the Karabakh 
Armenians’ right to determine the disputed region’s status. But a year ago, 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other senior Armenian officials stopped 
making references to the principle of self-determination it in their public 
statements.
Since then they have spoken instead of the need to ensure “the rights and 
security of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh,” fuelling opposition allegations 
that Yerevan is now ready to agree to Azerbaijani control over the 
Armenian-populated region. Pashinian underlined that policy change during a news 
conference held on March 14.
Nagorno-Karabakh - Demonstrators carry a huge Karabakh flag in Stepanakert, 
September 2, 2022.
On March 13, Karabakh’s leading political groups issued a joint statement 
demanding that Yerevan refrain from calling into question “the Artsakh people’s 
right to self-determination.” They said Pashinian’s administration must comply 
with a 1992 parliamentary act that bans Armenia’s government from signing any 
document recognizing Karabakh as a part of Azerbaijan.
Pashinian stated in January that the international community has always regarded 
Karabakh as an integral part of Azerbaijan. The claim was denounced by the 
Armenian opposition and Karabakh’s leadership.
Self-determination was one of the basic principles behind Karabakh peace plans 
jointly drafted by the United States, Russia and France prior to the 2020 
Armenian-Azerbaijani war. The opposition resolution blocked by Pashinian’s party 
emphasized this fact.
Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

What next in Armenia-Azerbaijan negotiations

In recent months, Armenia-Azerbaijan negotiations entered a digital phase. Armenia has been working on the text of the peace agreement, adding suggestions and sending them to Azerbaijan. Baku reviews them, mostly rejects Armenian suggestions, adds its ideas and sends the document back to Armenia. Yerevan again inserts its suggestions into the text, rejects some Azerbaijani ideas, and the document flies back to Azerbaijan. It is challenging to assess how the documents are being transmitted between sides, through some secure digital channels or mediators in hard copy versions. Regardless of the technical details, the process is a reminder of the publication process of an academic article when reviewers look through the text and suggest amendments and modifications before accepting the paper for publication. In this case, the reviewers and authors are the same persons, which adds some peculiarities.

The Pashinyan-Aliyev summit at the Munich Security Conference, facilitated by the US Secretary of State, February 18, 2023 (Photo: Prime Minister of the RoA)

The Pashinyan-Aliyev summit at the Munich Security Conference, facilitated by the US Secretary of State, seemed to break this circle and paved the way for the resumption of face-to-face meetings. Immediately after the Munich summit, the US State Department’s representative announced the upcoming meeting of Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders in Brussels. The Brussels format was perceived as an effective platform for reaching agreements. However, the process was stopped after the August 31 meeting, followed by Azerbaijani aggression against Armenia in September 2022. During his recent press conference, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan criticized the Brussels format, arguing that more than 10 agreements reached during negotiations were never realized. According to Pashinyan, there is no sense in continuing negotiations in Brussels and reaching new agreements before the realization of already-approved ideas. 

Meanwhile, Azerbaijan resumes its assertive actions and rhetoric. Overtly ignoring the International Court of Justice’s decision to end the Lachin Corridor blockade, Azerbaijan launched a subversive action in Nagorno Karabakh on March 5, 2023, killing three Armenian police officers. President Aliyev made a belligerent statement during the Nowruz celebration in Azerbaijan on March 18. He argued that if Armenians would like to live peacefully on 29,000 square kilometers, their government should accept Azerbaijani conditions of the peace agreement. That is, to recognize Nagorno Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan without any international presence or international guarantees for the protection of the rights of the Armenians and launch a delimitation and demarcation process based on Azerbaijani conditions. Otherwise, according to Aliyev, there would be no peace treaty. Putting aside President Aliyev’s attempt to reduce the territory of Armenia by 800 square kilometers, from 29,800 to 29,000, the statement was almost an ultimatum; either Armenia signs capitulation, which Azerbaijan calls a peace treaty, or Azerbaijan launches new attacks against Armenia, Nagorno Karabakh or in both directions. In recent days, Azerbaijan has been actively preparing the ground for a new escalation, accusing Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh of violating the ceasefire and transporting weapons and soldiers from Armenia to Nagorno Karabakh. Simultaneously, Azerbaijan has concentrated significant troops along several parts of the Armenia-Azerbaijan border. By rejecting any options for an international presence in Nagorno Karabakh and international guarantees for protecting the rights and security of Armenians, Azerbaijan is sending a clear signal that it will not tolerate Armenian presence in Nagorno Karabakh, at least in current numbers. Theoretically, Azerbaijan may agree to have several thousand Armenians there, using them as a showcase for international media to prove its so-called “tolerance,” but this will be a classic example of “soft ethnic cleansing,” similar to what happened in Nakhichevan during 1921-1988, when the Armenian population declined and eventually reached zero.

Simultaneously, Azerbaijan is assertively pushing forward the concept of “Western Azerbaijan,” arguing that the territory of Armenia was part of Azerbaijan, and Azerbaijanis should “return to their homeland.” Currently, Azerbaijan uses this concept as a stick to force Armenia to drop its demands for international presence in Nagorno Karabakh. Baku argues that it will agree to an international presence in Nagorno Karabakh only if Azerbaijanis return to Armenia, and Yerevan agrees to establish an international presence and mechanisms to guarantee their rights. However, as the concept of “Western Azerbaijan” gains more acceptance in Azerbaijan through the direct support of the state, there are no guarantees that even if Armenia drops its demands on Nagorno Karabakh and accepts the notion of Nagorno Karabakh without Armenians, Azerbaijan will stop pushing the concept of “Western Azerbaijan.”  

Armenia-Azerbaijan negotiations have reached a dangerous point. Since December 2021, Armenia has made significant concessions, first agreeing to discuss the autonomy of Nagorno Karabakh within Azerbaijan and later dropping any mention of status, calling only for an international presence to secure the rights of Armenians. However, Azerbaijan has not made any reciprocal steps, continuing to push forward its narratives. Azerbaijan claims that the conflict is over; Nagorno Karabakh was destroyed during the 2020 war, and Azerbaijan will never accept any international presence or international guarantees to protect the rights of Armenians. According to Azerbaijan, if Armenia does not accept Azerbaijani demands, Azerbaijan will not recognize Armenia’s territorial integrity, pushing forward the concept of “Western Azerbaijan.” 

On March 22, an Armenian soldier was killed in Yeraskh, a village in the Ararat region located only 60 kilometers from Yerevan. Many signs indicate that Azerbaijan may launch a new attack against Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh soon. While protecting its territory is the first and foremost responsibility of Armenia, international actors involved in the region should not simply sit and wait, as any new escalation will make the prospects of regional peace and stability less likely.

Dr. Benyamin Poghosyan is the founder and chairman of the Center for Political and Economic Strategic Studies and a senior research fellow at APRI – Armenia. He was the former vice president for research – head of the Institute for National Strategic Studies at the National Defense Research University in Armenia. In March 2009, he joined the Institute for National Strategic Studies as a research Fellow and was appointed as INSS Deputy Director for research in November 2010. Dr. Poghosyan has prepared and managed the elaboration of more than 100 policy papers which were presented to the political-military leadership of Armenia, including the president, the prime minister and the Minister of Foreign Affairs. Dr. Poghosyan has participated in more than 50 international conferences and workshops on regional and international security dynamics. His research focuses on the geopolitics of the South Caucasus and the Middle East, US – Russian relations and their implications for the region, as well as the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative. He is the author of more than 200 academic papers and articles in different leading Armenian and international journals. In 2013, Dr. Poghosyan was a Distinguished Research Fellow at the US National Defense University College of International Security Affairs. He is a graduate from the US State Department Study of the US Institutes for Scholars 2012 Program on US National Security Policy Making. He holds a PhD in history and is a graduate from the 2006 Tavitian Program on International Relations at Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.


Exhibition held in Artsakh capital to mark Aram Manukyan’s 144th anniversary

Panorama
Armenia –

An exhibition marking the 144th birth anniversary of Aram Manukyan, a devotee of the Armenian national liberation movement, a public figure of the First Republic of Armenia, the founder of the newest Armenian statehood and an ARF party member, launched at the Stepanakert Palace of Culture and Youth in Artsakh on Wednesday.

The exhibition was organized by the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport of the Artsakh Republic, Artsakhpress reported.

Artsakh’s Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sport Norayr Mkrtchyan delivered opening remarks at the event.

“Today, being present at the event dedicated to the 144th anniversary of the birth of Aram Manukyan, the founding father of the First Republic of Armenia, and talking about his heroic life, whose geography stretches from Baku to Kars, from Van to Yerevan, we can implicitly confirm that Aram Manukyan has left for us and the future generation a message of the greatest national bio-moral importance, that is, to rely only on our own strength, never to be discouraged, to continue the struggle for freedom and independence until the victorious end,” the minister noted.

The exhibition runs for two weeks.

Artsakh FM rules out ‘integration’ into Azerbaijan

Panorama
Armenia –

Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) Foreign Minister Sergey Gazaryan on Thursday strongly rejected any talks on Artsakh’s “integration” into Azerbaijan sought by Baku.

“I do not even want to use this wording of the Azerbaijani authorities,” he told a video conference on 100 days of the Artsakh blockade.

Gazaryan stressed that Artsakh “will continue its struggle for the international recognition of its exercised right to self-determination.”

“Despite all the difficulties caused by the blockade, the people of Artsakh are committed to the path they have embarked on and will make every effort, hoping for the active participation of the Diaspora Armenians and its partners from around the world in their struggle,” the Artsakh FM said.

Sergey Ghazaryan urged to stop using terms like “integration” and “reintegration”.

“The word “integration” is commonly perceived in a positive light. In the case of Azerbaijan any such wording is excluded. There cannot be any integration between the Armenians of Artsakh and Azerbaijan, it is ruled out,” he underscored.