Canada is the first country outside of EU joining EUMA – Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly in Jermuk

 10:33,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 26, ARMENPRESS. Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly has visited Jermuk.

Joly’s first stop in the Armenian town was the European Union Mission in Armenia (EUMA) operating base.

“It is a pleasure to be here in Jermuk, looking forward to learning more about the work that has been done by the EU mission which Canada is joining. Canada is the first country outside of EU joining this mission. So, we’ll be talking about the logistics, how we can integrate this important mission which is important to address the humanitarian issues in the region but also the fact that it is important to bring much peace and stability,” the Canadian FM said during a meeting with EUMA observers.

Joly will then visit Armenian military outposts.

She will also meet with forcibly displaced persons of Nagorno-Karabakh.

India considers sending Armenia more weapons – The Economic Times

 10:26,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS. India is mulling over supplying a fresh batch of military equipment to Armenia after the successful delivery of the first batch of weapons over the past year, The Economic Times reported citing people with knowledge of the matter.

A senior Armenian official visited Delhi recently and held discussions in this regard, people with knowledge of the matter told ET. India has emerged as a credible weapons supplier as per Armenia's requirements, they said. Details of fresh supplies are not known yet but the consignment could include equipment that would help to create a deterrence amid the conflict-like situation with Azerbaijan, according to observers in Armenia, who did not wish to be identified.
The ET report described Armenia as India’s “strategic ally in Caucasus.”

In 2022, Armenia became the first foreign buyer of the Indian Pinaka long-range rocket-artillery system.

Pashinyan held informal meeting with Azerbaijan’s Prime Minister on sidelines of 4th Tbilisi Silk Road Forum

 12:36,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 26, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had an informal meeting with Azerbaijan’s Prime Minister Ali Asadov on October 26 in Georgia, the Prime Minister’s Office said Friday. 

Prime Minister Pashinyan visited Georgia on October 26 to participate in the 4th Tbilisi Silk Road Forum. Azerbaijan’s PM Ali Asadov also participated in the event.

“After the banquet, an informal contact took place between the prime ministers of Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan,” the Prime Minister’s Office said in a statement.

Armenia nets approval for cash ban on online gambling transactions

SBC News, UK
Oct 27 2023

The government of Armenia is set to implement a ban on cash payment options for online betting and gaming operators.

Last week, the National Assembly of Armenia urged all relevant agencies to adopt new rules on the management of gaming accounts, aimed at ‘strengthening the fight against gambling addiction’.

In May 2022 the Assembly approved the new restrictions by 67 votes, denying national consumers the option to conduct transactions via electronic cash and payment terminals to top up online gambling accounts.

These new directives serve as a comprehensive ban on all cash transactions. Consequently, Armenian consumers cannot deposit or withdraw funds in Dram.

Per the directives given to the appropriate agencies, online gambling accounts can only be topped up via nationally-licensed banks that offer card services.

The proposal for this cash ban was initially crafted by Civil Party MPs Tsovinar Vardanyan and Gevorg Papoyan in 2022. It was designed as a protective measure for “socially vulnerable citizens”, especially those battling existing addictions, by curbing their easy access to betting platforms.

Though approved in 2022, the measures of the cash ban required examination by the National Assembly’s Finance Committee, as restrictions would alter existing rules related to Armenia’s management of financial, credit and budgetary issues.

As documented on 16 October, following a consultation, the Central Bank of Armenia submitted a positive recommendation for government agencies to adopt an  ‘updated legislative package’ related to amendment on online gambling transactions.

The regulatory proceedings of 2022 and 2023, have seen Armenia tighten its laws on gambling to align with stringent standards of other eastern European countries, including Georgia, Latvia, Estonia and the Czech Republic.

High impact measures have focused on enhancing age verification and customer ID requirements, enforcing checks across land-based gambling venues to ensure no one under the 21 is allowed to gamble.

 

 

The Past And Future Of Karabakh And South Caucasus Security – Analysis

Oct 28 2023

By Robert M. Cutler

The Karabakh conflict and the relationship between Armenia and Azerbaijan are often clouded by misinformation. To address this, it is crucial to highlight some historical facts. Despite claims to the contrary, ethnic Armenians began settling in Karabakh following Russia’s decisive triumph over the Persian Empire in the Russo-Persian Wars of the early nineteenth century. Following the 1828 Treaty of Turkmenchay, Christians from Persia were permitted and invited to relocate to the Russian Empire. It so happens that they were predominantly Armenians. They were settled not only in Karabakh but also in other South Caucasus regions like Javakheti in Georgia.

Since then, the fact of Armenian demography has served the interests of Imperial Russian, then Soviet, and now again Russian Federation influence in the South Caucasus. What took place between ethnic Armenians and the Ottoman Empire during World War I is an understandably emotional subject, yet it is essential to note that Azerbaijanis—although a Turkic people—were never part of the Ottoman Empire. Armenians nevertheless often simply call the Azerbaijanis “Turks,” conflating them with the Anatolian Turks, with whom they have cultural, historical, and even linguistic differences. Some observers see racist overtones in such a willful confusion, particularly given the more-than-scorn with which the term is used.

Recent Background and Questions of “Ethnic Cleansing”

As explained below, Armenians were not ethnically cleansed from Karabakh, despite claims by the Armenian diaspora to the contrary. By their own testimony, they were subject to no violence and chose on their own to leave. However, recent discussions about ethnic cleansing in the region necessitate a look back to 1987–1988. During those years, the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan initially erupted, in southern Armenia, even before the First Karabakh War of the early 1990s. It erupted as the Armenians expelled from southern Armenia about 180,000 Azerbaijanis who had resided there for generations, in what is historically the western part of the ancestral lands that they call Zangezur. Much of contemporary Armenia was for centuries under the sway of Azerbaijani khanates before these were absorbed into the Russian Empire.

The events of 1987–1988 were actually the fourth such expulsion of Azerbaijanis by Armenians in the twentieth century. Previous occurrences took place toward the end of Stalin’s rule (late 1940s and early 1950s) under the guise of Soviet administrative law, and also much more violently during the “re-Armenianization” military campaign in the years of the Russian Civil War (1917–1921), as well as during ethnic clashes earlier in the century (1905–1907). Nevertheless, during the Soviet period, the two peoples lived mostly harmoniously together, with innumerable interpersonal friendships, legendary cultural exchange, and significant degrees of intermarriage. This changed dramatically under Gorbachev’s glasnost and perestroika policies, when the opening of the Soviet Union to the world gave the international Armenian diaspora the chance to intervene in domestic Armenian affairs.

What Is the Present Situation?

This diaspora had overtly conserved for nearly a century all the divisive and xenophobic sentiments that were mostly repressed in Armenia proper under the Soviet regime. They supported an assassination campaign against Turkish diplomats in the 1970s and 1980s, and they constituted a main support of Karabakh separatism in the early 1990s and of the Karabakh leaders in power in Yerevan in subsequent years. It was this diaspora that has publicized around the world the false reports of recent ethnic cleansing of Karabakh. The prime minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, has himself publicly stated that there was no such cleansing and that the recent “antiterrorist operation” by the Azerbaijanis did not involve attacks against Armenian civilians.

To recall, this operation was the final phase of putting an end to the Armenian military occupation of sovereign Azerbaijani territory (this status underscored by four UN Security Resolutions in 1993), which began with the First Karabakh War in the early 1990s. In the fall of 2020, Azerbaijan launched the Second Karabakh War to dislodge those forces, which the European Court of Human Rights had found were not “local self-defense” forces but indeed supplied, managed, and directed from Yerevan, including soldiers and commanders from the main body of Armenia. Armenians who left the area following the recent antiterrorist operation consistently indicated, in interviews with local Armenian media, that they were treated respectfully and chose to leave voluntarily.

A mission of the United Nations to the region found literally no reports of violence against them, and no evidence that civilian objects had been targeted during Baku’s antiterrorist operation. Many Armenians who left shared with their interviewers, after they arrived in Armenia, that it was their own local Armenian authorities who advised—or ordered—them to depart. This would reasonably represent a failed attempt to demonstrate the impossibility of cohabitation. For there are Armenians who stayed—mainly born and raised during the Soviet era—and they were neither harmed nor persecuted, but rather supported by their newly arrived Azerbaijani neighbors and old friends in Baku, as well as by the government.

A significant factor in the prolonged unresolved conflict is the residual control exerted by Karabakh leaders, Robert Kocharyan (President of Armenia, 1998–2008) and Serzh Sargsyan (President of Armenia, 2008–2018), over the Armenian state apparatus. These Karabakhi leaders kept the Armenian population in poverty, enriching themselves and their associates. Pashinyan, who has been active in Armenian politics for over 25 years, rose to power in 2018 through popular street protests, opposing the long-standing rule of the Karabakh leaders. However, his leadership has been inconsistent, often swaying with political pressures from revenge-seeking forces within Armenia and the influential diaspora.

What Does the Future Hold?

Pashinyan has lately been going in all directions all at once, issuing one statement looking for peace in the morning followed by a bellicose one in the afternoon and an anodyne waffle in the evening. This seems to be a survival-habit learned from the whole of his political career, which in the past has been nevertheless marked by political courage and tactical, even sometimes strategic, intelligence. Now, however, he would seem to lack a unique foreign-policy strategy. He gives the impression, indeed, of having several different general visions that are not necessarily compatible, and all of which he pursues at the same time. This would explain why his short-term tactical moves have never, in the past five years, appeared to be integrated into a long-term plan.

Georgia’s Mikhael Saakashvili—who was president when Russia invaded his country in 2008 and is now imprisoned under the Russian-oriented government that subsequently took power in Tbilisi—has publicly advised Pashinyan to stop vacillating and equivocating. Pashinyan, Saakashvili says, needs to seize the opportunity while Putin is concerned with Ukraine and distracted. But can Pashinyan succeed? Russian state companies own the Armenian natural-gas distribution system as well as the Armenian state railroads company, and they are very highly influential in the banking system. Russia operates the Metsamor nuclear-power electricity-generating plant, and the Border Guard Service of Russia’s FSB provides security for nearly all of Armenia’s international frontiers.

This litany does not even mention the Russian military base at Gyumri with 3,000 soldiers and another air base with a squadron of attack helicopters at Erebuni Airport five miles from central Yerevan. Yet the signature of a peace treaty with Azerbaijan would, at a minimum, open the way for badly-needed fundamental changes in Armenia’s domestic and foreign policy. But can Pashinyan really withdraw from the Russian-led Commonwealth of Independent States, Collective Security Treaty Organization, and Eurasian Economic Union? Even if he can, still he is in no position yet to submit applications to the EU and NATO, as Saakashvili would have him do, since these organizations have their own rules and standards for even considering third parties to be members. 

However, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey are all ready to offer him support, like they have been since the late 2000s, when the Karabakh clique led by Kocharyan and Sargsyan refused it. Pashinyan, if he continues to trying to sit on two stools at the same time (Russia and the West), risks falling between them as the distance between them relentlessly increases. The first, absolutely necessary step is to sign a comprehensive peace treaty with Azerbaijan before the end of the year. Without this facilitating condition, nothing else is possible.

Robert M. Cutler was for many years senior researcher at the Institute of European, Russian and Eurasian Studies, Carleton University, and is a past fellow of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute.

https://www.eurasiareview.com/28102023-the-past-and-future-of-karabakh-and-south-caucasus-security-analysis/

Georgia’s main goal is to establish peace between Armenia, Azerbaijan–Georgian parliament speaker

 20:16,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS. Georgian parliament speaker Shalva Papuashvili has noted that the main goal and task of Georgia is to establish peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

"I am glad that there are positive developments in this regard for the signing of a peace agreement. I hope that it will be implemented as soon as possible, as it is in our shared interest to make our region an area of peace and security," Papuashvili said, reports Sputnik Georgia.

According to Georgian parliament speaker, Georgia has always been a country that has given friendly Armenia and Azerbaijan an opportunity to meet for substantive discussions, maintaining neutrality towards both countries.

Israel offered Hamas a ceasefire in exchange for hostages– Al Arabiya

 20:52,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS. Israel offered the Hamas movement a ceasefire in exchange for the release of all hostages and the release of the bodies of dead citizens of the Jewish state from Gaza, Al Arabiya reports with reference to sources.

According to sources, Israel and Hamas, with the mediation of Qatar and Egypt, are negotiating the release of the hostages.

“Israel offered a ceasefire in exchange for the release of all hostages and the transfer of the bodies of the dead Israelis”the message says.

It is emphasized that Hamas rejected this proposal from the Israeli side and also demanded the release of Palestinian prisoners.

In addition, it is reported that Hamas asked for a long-term truce, but representatives of the Jewish state refused to respond to this proposal.

Armenian Ambassador presents "Crossroads of Peace" initiative to Swedish FM

 21:16,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS. On October 26, Tobias Billström, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Sweden received Ambassador of Armenia Anna Aghadjanian, Embassy of the Republic of Armenia to Sweden informs. 

FM Billström reiterated Sweden's strong support to Armenia. Discussion focused on regional developments, ways to further expand bilateral agenda, as well as the cooperation through EU framework.

French Minister of Culture commemorates Armenian Genocide victims in Tsitsernakaberd Memorial

 11:42,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 26, ARMENPRESS. French Minister of Culture Rima Abdul Malak visited on October 26 the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial in Yerevan to commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

The French Minister of Culture placed a wreath at the memorial and flowers at the Eternal Flame honoring the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

She then visited the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute.

The French Minister was accompanied by the Armenian Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sport Zhanna Andreasyan and the French Ambassador to Armenia Olivier Decottignies.

Photos by Eduard Sepetchyan




Lindsey Snell: Armenians who stayed in Karabakh aren’t allowed to speak to their loved ones without being monitored

News.am, Armenia
Oct 27 2023

Lindsey Snell, an internationally known journalist who covers conflicts and their consequences, posted a video on X, former Twitter, one month after the Armenian ethnic cleansing by Azerbaijan in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), where an Artsakh woman tells how her father was adamant in his decision and stayed in Artsakh. Snell added as follows in this regard:

“A month after Azerbaijan attacked and ethnically cleansed Nagorno-Karabakh, [journalist] Cory Popp and I spoke to the daughter of one of the very few people who stayed behind.

“Azerbaijani state media recently bragged about AZ [(Azerbaijan)] establishing local telecom services, but the Armenians who stayed in NK [(Nagorno-Karabakh)] don't have internet or mobile connections, and they aren't allowed to speak to their loved ones without being monitored.

“And as part of AZ's ‘reintegration’ facade, AZ authorities confiscated the Armenian passports of those who remained, but haven't issued Azerbaijani passports to them.

“This means the Armenians who stayed in NK are currently stateless.”