Russian military opens field hospital in Stepanakert

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 09:51,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The Russian military has installed a field hospital in Stepanakert, the Russian Defense Ministry reported.

A special medical unit departed to Stepanakert via Yerevan over the weekend, it said.

The convoy was escorted by the Russian peacekeepers.

The field hospital is located in the territory of the Stepanakert City airport.

The medics will provide medical service to the on-duty Russian peacekeepers, as well as necessary medical aid to the population of Nagorno Karabakh.

 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan




Azerbaijan Forces Enter Third District Under Nagorno-Karabakh Truce

Voice of America
Dec 1 2020
By RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service
09:18 AM

BAKU, AZERBAIJAN – Azerbaijan says its forces have entered the Lachin district, the last of three handed back by Armenia as part of a deal that ended six weeks of fighting over the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region.

“Units of the Azerbaijani Army entered the Lachin region on December 1” under the deal signed on November 9 by Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia, the Defense Ministry said in a statement.

The ministry also released a video showing a tank flying the Azerbaijani flag and leading a column of trucks along a road at night.
 
Azerbaijan lost control of Lachin during a war with Armenia in the early 1990s as they transitioned into independent countries amid the breakup of the Soviet Union.
 
Lachin was a strategic link between Armenia’s internationally recognized border and ethnic Armenian-held areas in Nagorno-Karabakh.
 
Armenia agreed to hand over three districts ringing Nagorno-Karabakh — Agdam, Kalbacar, and Lachin — after nearly three decades under Armenian control as part of the Russian-brokered agreement signed on November 9, halting military action in and around Nagorno-Karabakh following the worst fighting in the region since the 1990s.

Agdam was ceded on November 20 and Kalbacar five days later.

Almost 2,000 Russian peacekeepers have moved into the area as part of the truce deal, including along the Lachin Corridor, an overland route linking Armenia with Nagorno-Karabakh.

The agreement also committed the parties to reopening their borders for trade but sets no time frame for that.
 
Ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh have been governing their own affairs, with support from Armenia, since Azerbaijan’s troops and Azeri civilians were pushed out of the region in a war that ended in a cease-fire in 1994.
 
Russia has extensive relations with both Armenia and Azerbaijan but provides security guarantees to the former.


Karabakh Rivals Adjust to Life Along New Borders

The Moscow Times, Russia
Nov 28 2020

Pomegranate harvest is in full swing on a field Zhorik Grigoryan nearly lost in the recent fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the disputed  Nagorno-Karabakh region. 

Azerbaijani forces were just 50 meters (less than a mile) away from the farmer’s land in the eastern Martuni district when a Moscow-brokered peace deal halted weeks of clashes over the restive region and saw the deployment of Russian peacekeepers there.

“There is no fear. (Armenian) soldiers are positioned on the ceasefire line, Russian troops are present,” Grigoryan tells AFP, adding: “But we are concerned about the future”. 

The 73-year-old farmer keeps a watchful eye over a dozen young men from the village of Berdashen as they fill large sacks with the dark red fruit that will be sent to the Armenian capital Yerevan to make juice and wine.

A short distance from the pomegranate field, Azerbaijani and Armenian soldiers are standing guard close to a road that runs from Martuni to Aghdam, a district in the north that Armenian separatists ceded to Azerbaijan. 

In late September fresh clashes broke out between the ex-Soviet rivals over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave that broke from Baku’s control in a war in the 1990s.

Under the truce signed on November 9, Azerbaijan reclaimed swathes of territory that for three decades were controlled by Armenian separatists.

Not far from the road to Aghdam, an Azerbaijani flag attached to a utility pole flutters above a makeshift guard post with only a tent and stacked tyres to protect a handful of soldiers on duty.

On the opposite side, 15 Armenian soldiers have also set up an equally simple camp. 

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The soldiers watch each other without allowing tensions to take hold.

“There is no problem,” says officer Mishik Grigoryan, 45, who is in charge of the post. “We are ready to defend our land.” 

Some 200 metres away on a strip of concrete, Russian peacekeepers are guarding a checkpoint flanked by armored vehicles.

The new border is marked by one-meter high wooden stakes, their tips painted in red and white.

Like many Armenians, Grigoryan did not welcome the ceasefire agreement that saw separatists lose control of several districts surrounding Karabakh and the historic town of Shusha.

“I am not satisfied with the outcome of the war because we have lost so many people and territories,” Grigoryan says bitterly.  

His three grandchildren were serving in the military when the war broke out. One of them died, another is in a Yerevan hospital with injuries. 

The third is still on duty. 

Another small camp near the road is manned by a dozen Armenian soldiers between the ages of 18 and 20, who keep watch over the Azerbaijanis from behind a long earthen mound more than two meters high.

Soldier Minas says he was born in Yerevan but migrated to Crimea, a peninsula on the Black Sea that was annexed by Russia in 2014. 

Once war broke out, Minas decided to return and join the fighting. 

He says he “regrets” the way hostilities ended but adds that it wasn’t an equal battle: “It was difficult, we had no means to fight”. 

He talks about military drones that frequently attacked their positions on the frontline. 

Many of his comrades died in the six weeks of fighting that claimed more than 4,000 lives. 

Like several of his fellow soldiers Minas is yet to take off his uniform and continues his service for 35,000 drams (73 dollars; 60 euros) a month. 

He hopes to get married soon but doesn’t know he will be able to leave his post.

Around noon, a taxi drives into their camp bringing sacks of fresh food to the young servicemen. 

Minas says one of the soldiers recently had a child: “Today, we are celebrating”. 

Azeri football official declared wanted by Armenian authorities for inciting genocide

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 15:20,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 27, ARMENPRESS. The Committee of Investigations of Armenia has placed the Azeri Qarabağ football club’s PR manager Nurlan Ibrahimov on a wanted list on charges of inciting ethnic and racial hostilitydirectly or publicly inciting genocide and endorsing or justifying genocide and other crimes against peace and safety of humanity.

A Yerevan court has issued an arrest warrant for Ibrahimov.

On November 26 UEFA announced that it has banned for life the Azeri football official for “racist behavior” and Qarabağ football club was fined 100,000 euros.

During the recent Artsakh war, Ibrahimov had made a statement on social media calling for the killing of “all the Armenians, old and young, without distinction”.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Minor earthquake detected near Georgia-Armenia border

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 09:50,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 26, ARMENPRESS. The Seismological Network of the Seismic Protection Regional Service says it detected a magnitude 2,4 earthquake at the Georgia-Armenia border zone, 16km south-west from the town of Dmanisi at 04:45 local time November 26.

The tremors measured at MSK 3 at the epicenter.

The Seismological Network of the Seismic Protection Regional Service hasn’t received any reports on residents having felt the tremors. 

 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Sandbags and monks in khaki: Russian troops guard Armenian monastery after ceasefire

Yahoo! News
Nov 16 2020




DADIVANK, Azerbaijan (Reuters) – Soldiers unloaded sandbags and monks donned khaki vests over their cassocks on Sunday after Russian peacekeepers arrived to guard the 12th century Armenian Dadivank monastery in territory due to be ceded to Azerbaijan within days.

Russia has deployed troops as part of a Moscow-brokered ceasefire deal to end six weeks of fighting between ethnic Armenian forces and Azeri troops over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas.

Ethnic Armenians have set fire to their homes, severed electricity cables and cut down trees before leaving the area that is to be handed over to Baku’s control.

But Father Ovanes, the superior of the monastery, said he would not leave, regardless of whether there were Russian peacekeepers stationed there to protect him.

“I was prepared and I said: I’m not getting out of here,” he told Reuters.

Azerbaijan was initially expected to take over the Kalbajar region, controlled by ethnic Armenians since the end of the first war over Nagorno-Karabakh in 1994, on Sunday.

But Baku has extended the deadline until Nov. 25, presidential administration official Hikmet Hajiyev said.

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has told his Azeri counterpart Ilham Aliyev to take care of Christian shrines in parts of Nagorno-Karabakh that Azerbaijan gets under the deal, the Kremlin said on Saturday.

Reuters reporters saw Russian peacekeepers guarding a newly established checkpoint next to the monastery. An armoured personnel carrier was parked in front of a chapel, and troops took selfies with the clergy inside.

“We are happy that our Russian soldiers, our brothers are here to protect the border and to protect this monastery, and the monastery will bless them and protect them,” said Father Moses, a clergyman.

Peacekeepers might be allowed to remain at the monastery as a result of negotiations which are still ongoing, Father Ovanes said.

The clergy has taken down church bells and cross-stones and sent them out of the region, fearing they could be desecrated and vandalised.

The monastery overlooks a village that was burnt down and abandoned by its residents after the peace deal.

Most residents had already left the Kalbajar district by Sunday, but some Armenian soldiers stayed behind to finish demolishing the houses in another village called Knaravan.

Reuters reporters saw them taking down electricity poles, sawing them and loading them into a truck next to a school that had its windows smashed and roof torn off.

“We don’t want to leave to the enemy, to Azerbaijan, what belonged to us. We just try to keep what belonged to us,” said one of the soldiers who declined to give his name.

(Additional reporting by Nvard Hovhannisyan in Yerevan and Nailia Bagirova in Baku; Editing by Matthias Williams and Hugh Lawson)


UK hopes Karabakh armistice will “move the parties closer towards a fully negotiated settlement”

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 13:58, 13 November, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 13, ARMENPRESS. The United Kingdom welcomes the Karabakh armistice and expresses hope that it will move the parties closer towards a fully negotiated settlement of the conflict, Nicola Murray, Deputy Head of the UK Delegation said at the OSCE Permanent Council on November 12.

“The United Kingdom welcomes the fact that the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan have agreed to end the fighting in and around Nagorno-Karabakh. It is clear that with the increasing numbers of civilian casualties and displaced persons, as well as the rising number of COVID-19 cases, a ceasefire was urgently needed. These actions will prevent further loss of life and will hopefully move the parties closer towards a fully negotiated settlement.

As the fighting subsides and winter sets in, we urge both parties to prioritise the humanitarian situation with a particular focus on the needs of women and children. Both the UNHCR and the ICRC should be given full access and support to provide much needed aid to civilians. We call on all parties to act responsibly and in good faith in enabling the urgent delivery of humanitarian assistance.

The UK would like to reiterate its support for the OSCE Minsk Group as the primary format through which any final settlement is reached. Its Madrid Principles provide a strong basis for a lasting resolution of the conflict, and its structures provide the framework for their implementation. We urge all parties to work closely with the Co-Chairs in support of their efforts.”

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia asks int’l organizations to save cultural heritage as Azeris vandalize Shushi Cathedral

Armenia asks int’l organizations to save cultural heritage as Azeris vandalize Shushi Cathedral

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 14:40,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 14, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian authorities are in permanent contact with UNESCO and other international organizations dealing with protection of cultural values over the endangerment of the Armenian historic-cultural legacy and archaeological sites in Artsakh that have come under Azeri control.

There are multiple religious sites, monuments, and works of art in territories that will be handed over to Azerbaijan or that have already come under Azeri control following the war.

“Given the deliberate destruction of cultural heritage values by Azerbaijan in the past (there is already evidence of vandalism against the Holy Savior Ghazanchetsots Cathedral), the norms of international law, as well as the cases of violations of obligations under the UN and the Council of Europe, the Armenian Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports has applied to international organizations demanding them to remain committed to their assumed mission and take practical and resolute actions to prevent and condemn manifestations of Azerbaijani vandalism,” the ministry said in a statement.

Holy Savior Ghazanchetsots Cathedral, the seat of the Diocese of Artsakh of the Armenian Apostolic Church, is located in the town of Shushi, which was captured by Azerbaijani forces. It was bombed twice during the fighting. Now, when the war ended, the church has already been vandalized with graffiti.

 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

International recognition of Artsakh becoming an absolute priority – Pashinyan

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 15:16,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. The issue of the final settlement of the Karabakh conflict and the status of Artsakh is of fundamental importance, Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan said while addressing the nation today.

“In this respect, our tasks do not change, and the international recognition of the Republic of Artsakh is becoming an absolute priority”, he said, adding that “in fact, currently there are more weighty arguments for the international recognition of Artsakh”.

“As for Nagorno Karabakh or more precisely the part which is under the control of the Artsakh authorities, the Lachin corridor from Goris to Stepanakert will operate uninterruptedly with the deployment of the Russian peacekeepers, moreover also in the Shushi section. Russian peacekeepers will ensure the same security, and Stepanakert-Yerevan communication should be reliable. The peacekeepers will also ensure the security of borders of that section of Artsakh, therefore the residents of settlements within the peacekeeping area should return to their settlements as soon as possible, and the governments of Armenia and Artsakh will do everything to eliminate the destructions, create all necessary conditions for peaceful and normal life as quickly as possible”, the PM said.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan