Nagorno-Karabakh welcomes Armenia’s UNSC emergency meeting request, expects adequate response

 22:05,

STEPANAKERT, AUGUST 12, ARMENPRESS. The Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Foreign Ministry has welcomed the Armenian government’s request to the UN Security Council for convening an emergency meeting on the humanitarian situation resulting from the blockade of Lachin Corridor.

In a statement released on Saturday, the Nagorno-Karabakh Foreign Ministry called upon the UNSC to adequately respond to the situation and reach a decision on the implementation of necessary, urgent and effective measures aimed at the immediate, complete and unconditional unblocking of the Lachin Corridor.

“We welcome the decision of the Government of the Republic of Armenia to submit a request to the United Nations Security Council to address the critical humanitarian situation that has emerged due to the ongoing unlawful blockade of the Lachin Corridor for the past eight months and the inhumane siege imposed on Artsakh.

“In this context, it is crucial to highlight that on 8 August, the President of the Republic of Artsakh requested the Government of the Republic of Armenia to urgently bring the humanitarian catastrophe caused by Azerbaijan’s blockage of the Lachin Corridor to the UN Security Council’s discussion.

“We consider the direct involvement of the United Nations Security Council and the adoption of corresponding urgent decisions to be a crucial factor capable of putting an end to the extensive and egregious human rights violations perpetrated by Azerbaijan in Artsakh and halting the genocidal policy consistently and systematically pursued by Azerbaijan against the people of Artsakh.

“We call upon the United Nations Security Council, which bears the primary responsibility for maintaining international peace and security, preventing genocides and other mass atrocities, as well as ensuring the implementation of decisions of the International Court of Justice, to adequately respond to the situation and reach a decision on the implementation of necessary, urgent and effective measures aimed at the immediate, complete and unconditional unblocking of the Lachin corridor,” the Nagorno-Karabakh Foreign Ministry said in the statement.

In ongoing disinformation campaign, Azerbaijan again falsely accuses Nagorno-Karabakh of opening fire

 22:20,

STEPANAKERT, AUGUST 12, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijan has again generated fake news, once again falsely accusing the Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army of breaching the ceasefire, local authorities have announced.

In a statement released Saturday evening, the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Defense Ministry denied Azerbaijan’s accusations of opening fire and warned that Baku is spreading disinformation.

“The statement released by the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry claiming that Defense Army units opened fire around 15:00, August 12, at Azerbaijani positions deployed in the occupied territories of the Martuni region is yet another disinformation,” the Nagorno-Karabakh Ministry of Defense said.

Armenian Christians Trapped and Facing Genocide: An Explainer

Aug 9 2023

Commentators say international intervention is needed immediately to allow food and necessities to get to the Armenians trapped in Nagorno-Karabakh.

More than 120,000 Christian Armenians are currently trapped, without food or medicine, behind a blockade of the Nagorno-Karabakh region maintained by the Muslim-majority nation of Azerbaijan. 

Former ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom Sam Brownback, who recently returned from a fact-finding mission to Armenia, said Azerbaijan is “strangling” the Christians in the region and that the blockade is the regime’s latest attempt at “religious cleansing.” 

“They’re working to make it unlivable so that the region’s Armenian-Christian population is forced to leave, that’s what’s happening on the ground,” Brownback said in June. 

Why is Armenia At War With Azerbaijan?

Since 1988, Armenia and Azerbaijan have been fighting over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, or “Artsakh,” as the Armenians call it.

Though some see the conflict as strictly one over borders, experts have emphasized that religion also plays a central part in the war between Christian Armenia and Muslim Azerbaijan. Armenia wants to retain its hold on Artsakh, while Azerbaijan wants to expel the Armenian Christian population to solidify its hold on the region, according to Brownback.

Azerbaijan is both politically and philosophically aligned with the major regional power, Turkey. Brownback believes Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has ambitions to reestablish the Ottoman Empire, which committed genocide on Armenian Christians in the early 20th century. 

Sandwiched between the Muslim nations of Turkey and Azerbaijan in the southern Caucasus Mountains, Armenia has long been under threat from its larger and more powerful Islamic neighbors.

With Christian roots that go back to ancient times, Armenia has one of the oldest Christian communities in the world.

Both nations were part of the Soviet Union until it fell in 1991. After the Soviets’ collapse, both claimed Nagorno-Karabakh as their own.

The conflict has escalated into outright war multiple times throughout the years, with several unsuccessful truces being unable to keep the peace.

What’s At Stake?

According to several experts who have spent time on the ground in Armenia, the Christian community in Nagorno-Karabakh is facing genocide.

“The situation is extremely urgent and existential,” Robert Nicholson, president of the Catholic human rights group the Philos Project, said in June.

“This is the oldest Christian nation facing again for the second time in only about a century the possibility of a genocide,” Nicholson added.

Commentators say international intervention is needed immediately to allow food and necessities to get to the Armenians trapped in Nagorno-Karabakh.

What is the Blockade About?

In 2020, with the backing of Turkey, Azerbaijan reignited the long-simmering conflict by invading Nagorno-Karabakh. A six-week conflict ended in Azerbaijan seizing control of Nagorno-Karabakh. 

The war killed 6,800 combatants, displaced 90,000 people, and left over 100,000 Armenian Christians cut off from the rest of Armenia. A narrow road less than four miles long, called the “Lachin Corridor,” connects Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh and is the only way to get food and supplies to the Armenians living there.

In December 2022 pro-government Azerbaijanis, ostensibly protesting Armenian environmental violations, began blockading the Lachin Corridor, cutting off all access to aid. In April, the protests ended after Azerbaijani troops, defying warnings from the international community, established a military checkpoint on the road, continuing the blockade.

How is the Blockade Threatening Christian Lives?

Since the start of the blockade in December 2022 the plight of the 120,000 Christian Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh has steadily worsened. 

Lusine Stepayan, project manager at the Catholic relief group Caritas Armenia, told CNA in February that the blockaded population includes 30,000 children, 20,000 elderly people, and 9,000 people with disabilities.

“The blockade of the Lachin corridor has left Nagorno-Karabakh without food, medicine, electricity, or natural gas,” Simon Maghakyan, a Denver-based researcher and human rights advocate, told CNA.

“The situation for the entire population is dire,” Maghakyan said. “They are on the brink of mass starvation. But the goal is psychological terror: to make the indigenous Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, who have lived in the region for 2,500 years, feel helpless and hopeless and leave at the first opportunity [when the blockade is lifted] for good.”

What Does the Pope Have to Say?

In his Dec. 18, 2022, Sunday Angelus remarks, Pope Francis voiced his worries about the situation in the Lachin Corridor.

“I ask everyone involved to commit themselves to finding peaceful solutions for the good of the people,” the Pope said. 

“In particular, I am concerned about the precarious humanitarian conditions of the populations, which risk further deterioration during the winter season,” Francis added.

Despite the Pope’s words and protests from Armenia, international human rights groups, and the United Nations, Azerbaijan has refused to lift the blockade and in January denied that it exists.

According to the Azerbaijani government, Azerbaijan guarantees the safety of civilians, vehicles, and goods traveling through the Lachin Corridor. In its view, these guarantees include “the prevention of abuse along Lachin Road.”

What Are Catholic Relief Agencies Doing?

Catholic Relief Services (CRS), the U.S. bishops’ international aid organization, has been supporting Armenian Christians in Nagorno-Karabakh through financial contributions to Caritas Armenia, the Armenian arm of the international Catholic relief group Caritas.

“After the outbreak of the war in 2020 CRS presence and direct and immediate support came very soon, from the very first days of the war,” Stepayan said. 

The agency provided emergency humanitarian relief, financial support, and capacity-building support to Caritas Armenia.

Caritas International has also supported Caritas Armenia’s fundraising and emergency appeals. 

What Can the U.S. Do?

Despite the blockade and preceding armed conflict, the U.S. has continued to give Azerbaijan millions of dollars in economic aid, according to U.S. State Department numbers. The U.S. sent more than $13 million in aid to Azerbaijan in the 2022 fiscal year. 

France and the European Union also continue to give Azerbaijan tens of millions of dollars in economic aid in recent years. 

This leads many to believe that international pressure can resolve the situation. 

Former ambassador Brownback has called on the U.S. government to invoke Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act of 1992. 

Section 907 mandates that U.S. aid and funding “may not be provided to the government of Azerbaijan until the president determines, and so reports to the Congress, that the government of Azerbaijan is taking demonstrable steps to cease all blockades and other offensive uses of force against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.”

Despite continued conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, the U.S. has waived this restriction for more than 20 years. 

What’s Next?

The U.S., European Union, Russia, and several other nations helped to facilitate several peace talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan in May and June. 

In the span of those two months, leaders from the warring nations met in Washington, D.C.; Moscow; Brussels; Chisinau, Moldova; and Ankara, Turkey, leading many to be hopeful that a diplomatic, peaceful solution could soon be on the horizon. 

Though Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as Azerbaijani-sovereign territory, he continues to advocate for the rights of the Armenians trapped in the region. 

Thus far there have been no official agreements or resolutions signed by either nation. 


https://www.ncregister.com/cna/armenian-christians-trapped-and-facing-genocide-an-explainer






‘Reasonable’ to believe genocide against Armenians being committed, former ICC chief prosecutor says

Aug 12 2023

Armenia-Azerbaijan Peace Negotiations: Mediators Have Responsibility to Protect

 MODERNDIPLOMACY 
Aug 12 2023

Published

  

on

 

By

 Hrair Balian

The United States and European Union are mediating an end to the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan festering since the fall of the Soviet Union. Russia sponsors separate talks. On 14 July, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan of Armenia and President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan met in Brussels for another summit with European Council President Charles Michel. An agreement is expected by the year end, but thorny divergences remain.

Threats and use of force are coercing Armenia to accept Azerbaijan’s demands. If, as a result, an inequitable agreement is consummated, the ultimate outcome is likely to be more war, not peace. Considering Western, Russian, Turkish, Israeli and Iranian geopolitical interests in the region, the war between two small countries may indeed have global implications.

The Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict is mainly over Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave with a majority Armenian population incorporated arbitrarily in Azerbaijan during the early Soviet years. Following independence in 1991, Armenia and Azerbaijan fought two wars over Nagorno-Karabakh in 1992-1994 and 2020. Pogroms against Armenians in Azerbaijan, and mass displacement of over one million people in both countries continue to poison relations. On 2 September 1991, Nagorno-Karabakh seceded from Soviet Azerbaijan in an attempt to preserve its population’s right to life, formed democratic governance institutions, and continued to self-govern to date.

At an earlier Brussels summit, Pashinyan announced Armenia’s readiness to recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity on the basis of reciprocity, and conceded that Nagorno-Karabakh could be part of Azerbaijan, provided the “rights and security” of 120,000 Armenians in the enclave are upheld. The Nagorno-Karabakh concession was unprecedented, but unnecessary under international law and a gratuitous addon to the mutual recognition of territorial integrity. The elected president of Nagorno-Karabakh rejected Pashinyan’s giveaway.

From a conflict resolution perspective, the prospect of peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan is indeed welcomed. However, there are grounds for skepticism: (1) Azerbaijan repeatedly violates international obligations; (2) the international community is unwilling to impose consequences for Azerbaijan’s breaches; and (3) Armenia is negotiating from a weak position and under pressure, in essence begging for peace.

Under such conditions, the first victims of an imprudent agreement would be the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, likely to be ethnically cleansed notwithstanding predictably toothless guarantees. Moreover, Azerbaijan is likely to continue its military incursions into Armenia proper, demanding baseless territorial concessions and endangering the very existence of the country.

Azerbaijan’s Repeated Violations of International Obligations

Since 12 December 2022, Azerbaijan has imposed a blockade on the only road connecting Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh through the Lachin Corridor, a 5 Km lifeline. Food, medicine and other vital supplies in the enclave are depleting fast, the movement of civilians is blocked, and access for NGOs and reporters is barred. The blockade intends to intimidate the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh and ultimately force them out – in essence this is the ethnic cleansing that Aliyev frequently threatens. The U.S., European states, and countless others have urged Azerbaijan to end the siege. In February, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ordered Azerbaijan to end the blockade [para 62], a binding decision under the UN Charter [Article 94]. But, Azerbaijan ignores the order.

In an alarming expert opinion, former chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Luis Moreno Ocampo warned that imminent genocide by starvation awaits the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Azerbaijan is in breach of countless international obligations. The Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly’s September 2021 resolution denounced Azerbaijan for deliberate damage during the 2020 war to Armenian cultural heritage, churches and cemeteries. Other reports also document the destruction of Armenian monuments. In December 2021, another ICJ ruling ordered Azerbaijan to stop the “vandalism and desecration affecting Armenian cultural heritage.” Yet, the vandalism continues unabated.

An article citing conclusive evidence catalogues the destruction of 89 Armenian churches, 5,840 stone crosses (khachkars), and 22,000 tombstones in Nakhichevan between 1964 and 1987. Nakhichevan is an exclave of Azerbaijan south-west of Armenia, also placed under Azerbaijan rule in early Soviet years. The 40% Armenian minority there was ethnically cleansed early on. Reports also detail violations of cultural, educational, and religious rights of the Lezghin, Talysh and Avar minorities in Azerbaijan.

The U.S.’s 2022 Country Report on Human Rights Practices in Azerbaijan documents violations of human rights writ large. Moreover, the ICJ noted with grave concern that Armenian prisoners of war are subjected to extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, torture and other ill-treatment [para 87].

Since 2020, Azerbaijan’s military incursions are testing the defenses around Nagorno-Karabakh and borders of Armenia proper, risking broader conflict, and pursuing two goals: (1) create facts on the ground while discussions are underway about Armenia-Azerbaijan border delineation; and (2) gain the high ground around border areas still not delineated. In May, President Aliyev claimed: “the border will be where we say it should be.” Aliyev frequently voices such comments, even laying claim to parts of modern-day Armenia. Former U.S. ambassador to Armenia John Heffern notes, the 2020 victory has “whetted Azerbaijan’s appetite towards encroachments into southern Armenia, in ways that threaten regional stability.”

In January 2023, the EU deployed 50 (number doubled later) unarmed observers along the borders of Armenia, aiming to “contribute to stability”. The Observer Mission is the first tangible international measure beyond meaningless expressions of concern. Azerbaijan declined observers on its side of the border.

Might Makes Right?

Pashinyan’s gratuitous concession on the Nagorno-Karabakh status is no doubt the outcome of Azerbaijan bullying, but also U.S./E.U. arm-twisting diplomacy. The giveaway seems to have startled Moscow: the concession “radically change[s] the fundamental conditions under which … the Russian peacekeeping contingent [was] deployed in the region”, leaving open the possibility of their early withdrawal. Russia deployed 2,000 peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh following the 2020 war. On July 26, Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov bluntly said that the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh “need to accept Azerbaijani rule,” a radical change from Moscow’s previous position that aimed to freeze the enclave’s status.

Another decisive factor for Pashinyan’s concession is Armenia’s weak military hand following the 2020 war and the aggressive posture of Azerbaijan since. Two additional contributing factors: Azerbaijan demands that the self-defense forces of Nagorno-Karabakh disarm forthwith; and in July, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey demanded the Russian peacekeeping force to withdraw from Nagorno-Karabakh by 2025.

Thus, vague assurances that Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh can enjoy rights and security under Azerbaijan’s rule are not convincing. As former NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen suggested, there is “need to have a kind of international mechanism to monitor, control and guarantee those rights and security for the people of Nagorno-Karabakh.” Otherwise, “any negotiated outcomes risk being discredited as the result of coerced agreement under duress. A peace that is extorted today will unravel tomorrow.”

Mediators’ Responsibility to Protect, or at the Very Least Do No Harm

Unless a sustainable agreement is framed, the ethnic cleansing and genocide of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh will remain on Azerbaijan’s agenda. The U.S., French and Russian cochairs of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) Minsk Group, charged with the Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations since 1992, managed such a feat in 2007. The Madrid Principles, proposed the following compromise provisions: (1) an interim status for Nagorno-Karabakh preserving its de facto independence (and right to exist); (2) future determination of the final legal status through a referendum; (3) a corridor linking Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh; (4) the right of displaced persons to return; and (5) international security guarantees including peacekeepers. A sixth provision, the return of territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh seized by Armenian forces as security buffer, was rendered moot by the Azerbaijani victory in 2020.

The Madrid Principles are grounded in the UN Charter and Helsinki Final Act of 1975, namely non-use of force, territorial integrity, and equal rights and self-determination. The proposal should not be dismissed offhand relying on outdated notions of international law.

In a seminal opinion (2010) regarding Kosovo’s declaration of independence, the ICJ ruled that, since the eighteenth century, “there were numerous instances of declarations of independence, often strenuously opposed by the State from which independence was being declared…. State practice … points clearly to the conclusion that international law contained no prohibition of declarations of independence. During the second half of the twentieth century, the international law of self-determination developed … to create a right to independence for the peoples of non-self-governing territories and peoples subject to alien subjugation, domination and exploitation” [para 79].

The ICJ also ruled that the principle of territorial integrity, enshrined in the UN Charter and the Helsinki Final Act, “is confined to the sphere of relations between States” and not to the right to self-determination [para 80]. In statements submitted to the ICJ, Germany, Austria, Croatia, Denmark, U.S., Finland, Norway, Netherlands, and U.K. supported the court’s subsequent conclusion on the right to self-determination.

Moreover, scholars have concluded that self-determination in the form of unilateral secession may be a remedy if a state violates its obligation to grant equal rights to all peoples within its territory. An eminent proponent of this theory, Antonio Cassese, recognized a “right to remedial secession”: if a state does not represent the whole population, in that it denies equal access to the political decision-making process and political institutions to any group and in particular on the ground of race, creed and color, then groups denied those rights are entitled to claim self-determination and to secede from the state [page 112].

Additionally, at the UN’s 2005 World Summit, Member States agreed (A/RES/60/1) to a “Responsibility to Protect”: “Each individual State has the responsibility to protect its populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. This responsibility entails the prevention of such crimes, including their incitement, through appropriate and necessary means. We accept that responsibility and will act in accordance with it.” [para 138].

Fearing for good reason that ethnic cleansing threatened their fundamental right to life, the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh unilaterally declared independence on 2 September 1991 and managed a successful self-defense against the full-scale war that Azerbaijan unleashed on them. This act of self-preservation, to live in peace and security, was in full compliance with the accepted international law of self-determination and the OSCE Madrid Principles. Azerbaijan declared independence from the Soviet Union on 18 October 1991 when Nagorno-Karabakh was no longer part of the country.

The Armenia-Azerbaijan mediators must not dismiss the contemporary interpretation of the international law principles of self-determination and territorial integrity. The mediators have the responsibility to protect the very survival of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh. Urgent dialogue under three separate international negotiation tracks is essential: between the authorities of Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan; Armenia and Azerbaijan; and Armenia and Turkey. Long-term mechanisms are needed for the Armenians, Azerbaijanis and Turks to unburden themselves from the weight of wrongs committed, and to ensure cooperation going forward. Incentives and disincentives can compel good faith implementation of commitments undertaken.

Mediators have a range of options for the status of Nagorno-Karabakh. The upper end option, recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh’s secession from Azerbaijan, seems off the mediation agenda. While the absolute minimum benchmark must be the enclave’s Soviet era status as an autonomous region, Azerbaijan’s racist rhetoric and genocidal conduct precludes this option without external safeguards.

A compromise could be a status akin to the U.S.-brokered Good Friday Agreement for Northern Ireland (1998), which would: (1) grant Nagorno-Karabakh the highest-level autonomy within Azerbaijan with complete powers over the population’s rights and security; (2) grant Armenia and Azerbaijan joint governance authority for certain powers not reserved for the autonomous authority; and (3) confirm Nagorno-Karabakh’s right to self-determination as a guarantee should Azerbaijan continue its genocidal policies. Initially, an international peacekeeping presence would be a must.

Once an outcome is agreed for the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, more rational discussions could resolve the remaining disputes between the two countries: (1) border delimitation; (2) unblocking transport links; and (3) missing persons, detainees and prisoners of war.

The geopolitical interests of the West in Azerbaijan’s oil and gas supplies and pipelines should not trump the mediators’ and the international community’s responsibility to protect a people under imminent threat.

https://moderndiplomacy.eu/2023/08/12/armenia-azerbaijan-peace-negotiations-mediators-have-a-responsibility-to-protect/

AFP: Armenia Calls For UN Help On Nagorno-Karabakh

BARRON’S
Aug 12 2023
  • FROM AFP NEWS

Armenia on Saturday urged the UN Security Council to hold a crisis meeting on Nagorno-Karabakh, citing a “deteriorating humanitarian situation” after accusing Azerbaijan of blocking supplies to the disputed region.

The Caucasus neighbours have been locked in a dispute over the enclave — internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan — since the 1980s and fought two wars over the territory.

The second, in 2020, saw the defeat of Armenian forces and significant territorial gains for Azerbaijan.

“The Armenian government demands the intervention of the UN Security Council as the main organ for safeguarding global security,” Mher Margaryan, Armenia’s  permanent representative to the UN, said in a letter to the body.

For months, Yerevan has accused Baku of stopping traffic through the Lachin corridor — a short, mountainous road linking Armenia to Armenian-populated settlements in the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

In his letter, Margaryan referred to “serious shortages” of food, medicine and fuel in the majority Armenian-populated region of Azerbaijan and cuts in electricity and gas supplies.

“This situation has led to rising mortality due to several illnesses,” said Margaryan, citing patients suffering from conditions including diabetes and cardiovascular diseases.

“The population of Nagorno-Karabakh today stands on the edge of a veritable humanitarian catastrophe,” he warned, accusing Azerbaijan of “deliberately creating unbearable living conditions for the population.”

That, he wrote, amounted to an “atrocity” designed to force them from their homes.

Armenia and international aid groups have meanwhile been warning that the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh is dire and deteriorating, with shortages of food, medicines and energy.

The two neighbours have been unable to reach a lasting peace settlement despite mediation efforts by the European Union, United States and Russia.

https://www.barrons.com/news/armenia-calls-for-un-help-on-nagorno-karabakh-cff57e6

READ ALSO
https://www.malaymail.com/news/world/2023/08/12/armenia-calls-for-un-help-on-nagorno-karabakh/84915

Film Review: Aurora’s Sunrise

Aug 11 2023
Reviews
3.5 stars
My grandfather served valiantly in World War II, landing on the beaches of Normandy, coming home, and never speaking of it again for decades. Near the end of his life, he started to share some stories, often unexpectedly at family gatherings, things he had never told anyone, but one suspects he had thought about for decades. I often wished I could get him to sit down and talk about his life, but I knew it was too painful for him to do so. I thought of that feeling of what’s lost when we don’t record history while watching the excellent “Aurora’s Sunrise,” a film that both chronicles a horrendously dark chapter in the world but also speaks to the value of filmmaking in the first place. It’s a stunning hybrid that melds animation, interview footage with its subject, and a 1919 silent film once thought lost to history that’s about her life. Imagine being able to sit with a loved one and see their harrowing life story unfold both in new animated recreations and actual footage from the era that’s over a century old. Aurora Mardiganian’s story is a moving tale of heroism that Hollywood once thought harrowing enough to make into a truly disturbing feature film. Now it’s been resurrected, over a hundred years later, to be told again. It’s a reminder that film doesn’t just record history, it can transport us through it. 

Arshaluys Mardiganian was born in 1901 in a small village in the Ottoman Empire. In 1915, the Ottomans committed genocide against the Armenian people, and Aurora’s family was ripped apart. As thousands of Armenians were murdered, Aurora was part of a death march that nearly killed her multiple times and forced her to bear witness to countless atrocities. Like a lot of young women, she was sold into the slave market, but she escaped, finding her way eventually to St. Petersburg, which promised a route home. Eventually landing on a boat out of Oslo to New York City, she made it to America, and she wrote a book called Ravished Armenia that would be used to draft the film “Auction of Souls,” a project designed to bring attention to the plight of Armenians. Lost for generations, part of the film was found in the ‘90s and restored for release in 2009. Scenes from “Auction of Souls,” starring Mardiganian herself, are cut into “Aurora’s Sunrise,” including a lengthy interview with Aurora from the ‘90s and animated recreations of her story.

“Aurora’s Sunrise” is a historical documentary about the horror of the Armenian genocide, but its power comes from being filtered through the eyes and voice of one of its survivors. It forces one to consider how many stories, horrors, and triumphs have been lost to history because they didn’t have a film like “Auction of Souls” or a confident storyteller like Aurora to tell them. The events in this film unfolded over a century ago, yet it all feels so present in director Inna Sahakyan’s hands because of how much she gives them to Aurora. A narrator tells parts of her story, but we also hear Aurora herself often, intercut with footage of her as a young woman recreating her trauma. The layers of filmmaking—truth on recreation on truth—give the whole thing a fascinating power because it emphasizes the need to not only have people willing to tell these stories but also to listen.

I wished some of the animation was a little sharper, although I suspect the lack of style is intentional. Characters have a habit of floating instead of walking and minimal facial expressions, but a stronger animated look might have really amplified the sense of memory in the overall piece. Christine Aufderhaar’s lovely score helps greatly with the animated segments, giving them an even greater sense of loss without being manipulative.

The interview with Aurora herself is captivating, but I found myself most entranced every time “Sunrise” cut to “Auction of Souls.” Here’s a silent film with hundreds of extras shot in the California desert, depicting abject horrors that took place relatively recently on the other side of the world. It was clearly an act of activism, but it’s also just a breathtakingly daring production that looks like it was truly dangerous to film. And all of it was almost lost forever. In an era when it seems like everything is being recorded all the time, leading to unbelievable access to events happening around the world, “Aurora’s Sunrise” is a reminder that we can’t let it all turn into just white noise, that we need to truly see and hear, or we risk losing the history that has shaped us all.

In limited release now, expanding across the country over the coming weeks.


https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/auroras-sunrise-movie-review-2023

Prominent genocide scholars have submitted an open letter to the UN Secretary-General, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights…

“The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute” Foundation
Aug 11 2023


H.E. António Guterres
UN Secretary-General,

Mr. Volker Türk
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights,

Ms. Alice Wairimu Nderitu
Special Adviser of the UN Secretary-General on the Prevention of Genocide,

UN Security Council Member States

9 August 2023

We, the undersigned scholars and experts on genocide, are writing to you with an overwhelming sense of urgency and concern about the potential for genocide in the Republic of Artsakh (also known as the Nagorno Karabakh Republic). As scholars deeply engaged in the study of genocide, we bear witness to the horrors of history, rigorously analyze past and present atrocities, working to prevent new genocides from occurring. Presently, we find ourselves profoundly concerned by the emergence of unmistakable warning signs of genocide in Artsakh. The most significant risk factor is the unlawful blockade of the Lachin Corridor, which serves as the vital link connecting Artsakh to Armenia.

Since December 2022, the Lachin Corridor, the sole lifeline connecting the Artsakh population to the outside world, has been unlawfully blockaded by Azerbaijani authorities. This distressing situation reached a critical juncture on June 15, 2023, when Azerbaijan sealed off this vital road, subjecting the Republic of Artsakh and its 120,000 residents to a dire state of siege. For the past two months, Artsakh has been forcibly deprived of its ability to access essential supplies such as food, medicine, and other critical goods. Even humanitarian relief efforts conducted by Russian peacekeepers and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) have been obstructed, exacerbating an already grave humanitarian crisis.

The escalating humanitarian crisis has prompted the ICRC, the sole international organization with a presence on the ground, to issue a grave alert. In a public statement released on July 25 (https://www.icrc.org/en/document/azerbaijan-armenia-sides-must-reach-humanitarian-consensus-to-ease-suffering), the ICRC unequivocally documented that“The civilian population is now facing a lack of life-saving medication and essentials like hygiene products and baby formula. Fruits, vegetables, and bread are increasingly scarce and costly, while some other food items such as dairy products, sunflower oil, cereal, fish, and chicken are not available.”

Furthermore, the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect has issued an alarming atrocity alert for Nagorno Karabakh(https://www.globalr2p.org/publications/atrocity-alert-no-358/), highlighting the persistent risk of enduring mass atrocity crimes.

Considering the aforementioned circumstances and drawing upon additional pertinent information provided by various impartial organizations, human rights organisations, and other relevant stakeholders, we, as experts in the field of genocide studies, hold the view that compelling indicators exist that in the absence of prompt and resolute action, a genocide targeting the ethnic Armenian population of Artsakh is a looming possibility. The prevention of genocide and safeguarding vulnerable populations stand as fundamental obligations of the global community, as underscored by the United Nations Charter and the Genocide Convention of 1948, along with subsequent pledges undertaken by international actors. Guided by these principles, we strongly urge member states and UN bodies to promptly and resolutely step forward, exercising their responsibility to forestall any additional loss of innocent lives and preclude the occurrence of large-scale atrocities.

Specifically, we call upon the United Nations to activate its early warning mechanism, as stipulated within its mandates, to expeditiously address the tangible and imminent threat of genocide in Artsakh. We urge a concerted international effort to bring this grave situation to the attention of the UN Security Council. The Security Council should take decisive action to avert the progression of genocide by urgently removing the blockade on the Lachin Corridor, thereby reinstating unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles, and cargo along this life-supporting corridor in both directions. Security Council action should also support of the Provisional Measures order of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) of 22 February 2023 (reaffirmed 6 July 2023), which ordered Azerbaijan to ‘take all measures at its disposal to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions’. A Provisional Measures order is binding, and Azerbaijan remains in breach of its international law obligations by not complying with the ICJ’s order. Furthermore, we urge that the UN establish and send a fact-finding mission to Artsakh for a thorough analysis of data, on-site reporting, and engagement with local communities and organizations to identify and eliminate the consequences of the ongoing crime.

The prevention of genocide requires a collective effort, a unified resolve, and unwavering commitment from the international community. We urge the United Nations and its bodies to prioritize the prevention of genocide in Artsakh and take decisive action to protect the lives and dignity of thousands of innocent people.

Time is of the essence. We urge you to act swiftly and decisively, guided by the principles of the United Nations and the mandate to protect humanity from the scourge of genocide.

Respectfully signed,

Melanie O’Brien, Associate Professor of International Law, University of Western Australia; and President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars

Henry C. Theriault, Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs at Worcester State University, Past President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars (2017-2021)

Andrew Woolford, Professor, Head of Department of Sociology and Criminology, University of Manitoba, Past President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars (2015-2017)

Israel Charny, Director of the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide in Jerusalem, Past President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars (2005-2007)

Armen Marsoobian, Professor of Philosophy, Southern Connecticut State University, Past First Vice President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars (2019-23)

Elisa von Joeden-Forgey, Chair of Department of Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Keene State College, Past First Vice President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars (2015-17)

Hervé Georgelin, Assistant Professor, Department of Turkish Studies and Modern Asian Studies, National and Capodistrian University of Athens

Dr. Vasileios Meichanetsidis, Greek Genocide scholar


RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/11/2023

Friday, 
Armenian Government Allocates Money For Snoop Dogg Concert In Yerevan
        • Marine Khachatrian
U.S. singer Snoop Dogg
The Armenian government has allocated more than $5 million for the organization 
of a concert of American rapper Snoop Dogg in Yerevan. The concert is scheduled to be held at the Hrazdan Stadium in the Armenian 
capital on September 23. Up to 25,000 people are expected to attend the event that is also hoped to bring 
more tourists to the South Caucasus country. The first announcement of a possible Snoop Dogg concert in Yerevan was made by 
chief of the prime minister’s office Arayik Harutiunian in late July. A document 
appeared on the Internet shortly according to which more than $23 million would 
be allocated from the state budget for concert programs. The kind of state funding sparked a public debate in Armenia, with many 
challenging the wisdom of such government spending. The government stopped short of denying that some money would be allocated to a 
private company for a rapper’s concert in Yerevan, but insisted that it would 
not be anywhere near the claimed amount. Observers note that concerts and visits to Armenia in recent years by such world 
stars and celebrities as American rapper 50 Cent, Armenian American musician 
Serj Tankian, Armenian American reality TV star Kim Kardashian and her former 
rapper souse Kanye West have helped raise the country’s international visibility 
and attract a greater number of tourists immediately as well as in the longer 
run. Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr., a 51-year-old rapper and actor professionally known 
as Snoop Dogg, has sold 35 million albums worldwide since 1992, remaining one of 
the world’s most popular performers during the past three decades. Moscow Paper Reveals Russian Offer On Access To Karabakh
        • Hrach Melkumian
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
An Azerbaijani checkpoint at the entrance to the Lachin corridor leading from 
Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh (file photo). Citing an unnamed state official, Russia’s leading daily, Kommersant, wrote on 
Friday that Moscow had proposed ending the current situation with the blocked 
access to Nagorno-Karabakh by opening both the Agdam and Lachin roads. The paper said the arrangement that both the Azerbaijani and Karabakh sides had 
almost agreed to eventually did not go through, however. According to the official “familiar with the regional situation”, Russian 
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov proposed opening the Agdam road first, through 
which Red Cross vehicles would deliver what was necessary to Nagorno-Karabakh, 
and a day later, according to Moscow’s proposal, the Lachin road would be opened. “Such an option was brought to a high level of preparation,” said the unnamed 
official who spoke to Kommersant. But, according to him, the Karabakh Armenians first set a condition that Lachin 
should be opened not one day later, but simultaneously and then demanded that 
Azerbaijani goods should not be delivered through Agdam. The paper writes that 
then a scandal related to Azerbaijan’s detention of a Karabakh resident at a 
checkpoint in the Lachin corridor on charges of war crimes allegedly committed 
during the early 1990s emerged and “the compromise did not happen.”
According to the official cited by Kommersant, Moscow assesses the situation as 
serious and believes that Baku is not inclined to make concessions. “All attempts to somehow calm the situation that are being made by us, Western 
and international organizations lead to nowhere. Baku is not backing down,” the 
official said, adding that the Karabakh authorities are also persistent, in 
particular, in rejecting the option of using the Agdam road. According to the Russian official, though, the Agdam road will be opened in any 
case. Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said at a meeting with the head of 
the Red Cross office in Baku on July 14 that Azerbaijan does not rule out the 
possibility of “providing assistance” to meet the needs of Karabakh Armenians by 
using the Agdam-Stepanakert road. One day later, on July 15, after a meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Brussels, President of the 
European Council Charles Michel said that as well as urging Aliyev to reopen the 
Lachin corridor he “noted Azerbaijan’s willingness to equally provide 
humanitarian supplies via Agdam.”
“I see both options as important and encouraged the humanitarian deliveries from 
both sides to ensure the needs of the population are met,” he said. Authorities in Stepanakert strongly rejected that option, insisting that the 
Agdam road cannot be an alternative to the Lachin corridor, which, they stressed 
should remain solely under the control of Russian peacekeepers in accordance 
with the terms of the 2020 Moscow-brokered ceasefire agreement. Commenting on the publication in the Russian newspaper, Artur Harutiunian, a 
member of Nagorno-Karabakh’s parliament, stressed that alternative options could 
become a subject of discussion only after the Lachin road gets to be operated 
without interruption. “We clearly say that we have a corridor under a signed document, the Lachin 
corridor, which should work without interruption. After it works without 
interruption, those alternative options are already issues to be discussed,” the 
region’s lawmaker told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. Pashinian Warns Azerbaijan Against ‘Nullifying Historic Opportunity For Peace’
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks at a weekly cabinet meeting (file 
photo). Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Friday called for the lifting of 
Azerbaijan’s current blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh, warning Baku against 
“nullifying a historic opportunity for establishing peace.”
Speaking about the deepening humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh brought on 
by what Yerevan views as an illegal closure by Azerbaijan of the Lachin 
corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, Pashinian 
stressed that the Armenian-populated region haս been deprived of any commercial 
shipments since last December as well as any humanitarian supplies since the 
middle of June when Baku tightened its blockade at a checkpoint installed on the 
road in April. Pashinian said that a convoy of about two dozen trucks with about 400 tons of 
humanitarian supplies, including flour, pasta, cooking oil, sugar, salt, 
medicines and some other basic products, that the Armenian government sent to 
Nagorno-Karabakh late last month still remains stranded in Armenia’s Syunik 
province not far from the Lachin corridor as Azerbaijan refuses to allow its 
passage. He said there was no explanation to Azerbaijan’s banning humanitarian supplies 
to Nagorno-Karabakh “if we do not consider it within the context of Azerbaijan’s 
open policy of subjecting Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh to a genocide.”
“To be more precise, the ban on the entry of humanitarian cargoes to 
Nagorno-Karabakh makes more trustworthy statements about the policy being 
carried out by Azerbaijan on subjecting Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians to a 
genocide,” the Armenian prime minister charged. Pashinian said that there is a growing opinion among international experts that 
“Azerbaijan’s policy on causing a humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh by its 
illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor can be regarded from the point of view 
of the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime 
of Genocide of December 9, 1948.”
Pashinian said that the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh caused by 
Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin corridor has deepened to the extent that 
“greater efforts need to be taken in the direction of providing an international 
legal assessment of the created situation.” He stressed that Azerbaijan 
continues to fail to comply with the order by the Criminal Court of Justice to 
restore “unimpeded” traffic through the Lachin corridor that was first issued in 
February and then reaffirmed in July. “The best solution to the current situation is the removal of Azerbaijan’s 
illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor and the start of a dialogue between 
Stepanakert and Baku within the framework of an international mechanism,” 
Pashinian said. “The Republic of Armenia, for its part, continues to reaffirm its commitment to 
the peace agenda and calls on official Baku to refrain from steps nullifying a 
historic opportunity for establishing peace,” the Armenian premier underscored. Armenia and ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh view the Azerbaijani 
checkpoint in the Lachin corridor as illegal as they accuse Baku of violating a 
Moscow-brokered 2020 ceasefire agreement that places the vital route under the 
control of Russian peacekeepers. Azerbaijan’s de facto blockade has resulted in severe shortages of food, 
medicine, and energy supply in Nagorno-Karabakh, which is home to about 120,000 
ethnic Armenians. Azerbaijan denies blockading Nagorno-Karabakh and offers an alternative route 
for supplies via the town of Agdam, which is situated east of the region and is 
controlled by Baku. Ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh reject that offer, fearing that 
it could be a prelude to the region’s absorption into Azerbaijan. Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh for 
decades. Some 30,000 people were killed in a war in the early 1990s that left 
ethnic Armenians in control of the predominantly Armenian-populated region and 
seven adjacent districts of Azerbaijan proper. Decades of internationally mediated talks failed to result in a diplomatic 
solution and the simmering conflict led to another war in 2020 in which nearly 
7,000 soldiers were killed on both sides. The 44-day war in which Azerbaijan regained all of the Armenian-controlled areas 
outside of Nagorno-Karabakh as well as chunks of territory inside the Soviet-era 
autonomous oblast proper ended with a Russia-brokered ceasefire under which 
Moscow deployed about 2,000 troops to the region to serve as peacekeepers. Tensions along the restive Armenian-Azerbaijani border and around 
Nagorno-Karabakh leading to sporadic fighting and loss of life have persisted 
despite the ceasefire and publicly stated willingness of the leaders of both 
countries to work towards a negotiated peace. Armenia To Raise Lachin Corridor Closure Issue At UN Security Council
        • Nane Sahakian
An Armenian truck convoy carrying humanitarian aid to Nagorno-Karabakh stranded 
near the Lachin corridor as Azerbaijan does not allow it to pass through its 
checkpoint. Armenia, Syunik Province, July 27, 2023. Armenia will raise the issue of the closed Lachin corridor at the United Nations 
Security Council, the country’s Ambassador-at-Large Edmon Marukian said on 
August 10, adding that related work is “in progress.”
“No one can say when, on what day, but the Republic of Armenia will raise this 
issue at the UN Security Council. Why do I say that work is in progress? Because 
without preparatory work, at least to the extent that we can hope that we can 
expect a result for us, I think it is obvious that we cannot just fire this one 
shot with a blank cartridge,” Marukian said in an interview with CivilNet, a 
leading local news website. In an August 8 urgent appeal to the international community on the situation in 
Nagorno-Karabakh caused by Azerbaijan’s effective blockade the region’s ethnic 
Armenian leader Arayik Harutiunian also asked Yerevan to immediately make the 
situation a subject of discussion at the UN Security Council. The Armenian Foreign Ministry has not yet officially responded to the appeal. Marukian said that Armenia is working to ensure that none of the members of the 
UN Security Council, especially its five permanent members -- the United States, 
Russia, China, France, and the United Kingdom -- do not interfere with the 
process. Edmon Marukian
“In this sense, I would not compare it with the previous times, because this 
time we are determined to go for a resolution. We have never been after a 
resolution. That is, in this sense, it is very important that thorough work be 
done, and we count on a UN Security Council resolution on the Lachin corridor. We need at least 9 “for” votes, and in this regard, I believe that serious work 
has been done, is being done and still needs to be done,” Armenia’s 
ambassador-at-large said. Marukian said that Azerbaijan is taking countermeasures against Armenia’s move 
at the UN Security Council. When asked which country unambiguously supports Armenia in this matter, Marukian 
said that it would be wrong to give the name of any country now. “There is a 
very important circumstance here that the process of adopting a resolution at 
the UN Security Council is open and public. Previous negotiations, for example, 
on an application, on the application of the chairman, were a different 
procedure, and they contained discussions that are not public, not visible. In 
this case, you will see which country will take which position,” he said. Government critics in Armenia point out that Azerbaijan has further toughened 
its policy towards Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians after the statements of Armenian 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian following last year’s meeting in Prague where he 
recognized the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, including Nagorno-Karabakh. However, according to Marukian, a signed document, which is the November 9, 2020 
ceasefire agreement in Nagorno-Karabakh signed by the leaders of Armenian, 
Azerbaijan and Russia, has a higher legal force than a political statement. “There is a tripartite document dated November 9 [2020], the presence of which 
is recognized by us, Azerbaijan and Russia, that is, this document has not been 
canceled, it exists, it is in force, its architecture in relation to 
Nagorno-Karabakh has not been completely canceled, on its basis the 
International Court of Justice adopted its interim decision. If we read this 
decision, we’ll see that it is also built on the November 9 document, and thus 
the international community gives force to the November 9 document. While in 
previous discussions at the UN our international partners wanted to avoid 
references to the November 9 document, how are they going to avoid it now, when 
the court is building its interim decision on it? This document from November 9 
[2020] is a valid document, and statements are statements of a political nature. I repeat that a document has a higher legal force,” Marukian underscored. Armenia and ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh accuse Azerbaijan of 
violating the Moscow-brokered 2020 ceasefire agreement that places the Lachin 
corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, under the 
control of Russian peacekeepers. They insist, therefore, that the Azerbaijani 
checkpoint installed there earlier this year is illegal. The de facto blockade imposed by Azerbaijan has resulted in severe shortages of 
food, medicine, and energy supply in Nagorno-Karabakh, which is home to about 
120,000 ethnic Armenians. Azerbaijan denies blockading Nagorno-Karabakh and offers an alternative route 
for supplies via the town of Agdam, which is situated east of the region and 
away from Armenia and is controlled by Baku. Ethnic Armenian authorities in 
Nagorno-Karabakh reject that offer, fearing that it could be a prelude to the 
absorption of what remains of the former autonomous oblast into Azerbaijan. 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.

Protesters block 134 Freeway in Glendale to call attention to crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh

 10:41,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS. Several hundred protesters blocked one side of the 134 Freeway in Glendale, California Wednesday night to call attention to the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh resulting from Azerbaijan’s blockade of Lachin Corridor.

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Using a big rig, protesters blocked off the eastbound side of the freeway at Central and Brand avenues, ABC7 reports.

Protesters then gathered on freeway lanes and unfurled signs calling for support from U.S. Congressman Adam Schiff, a staunch supporter of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Protesters have also been showing up at Schiff’s local office in recent days, calling on the Democratic congressman to do more to support their cause, according to ABC7. 

In the past, Schiff has issued statements condemning the blockade and calling for the Biden Administration to take action. He also has authored a House resolution calling for recognition of Artsakh’s sovereignty and condemning Azerbaijan’s aggression.

In a statement released August 7, Schiff said, “With Azerbaijan’s refusal to allow the International Committee of the Red Cross to deliver lifesaving humanitarian aid in, and transport patients requiring urgent medical attention out of Artsakh, the need for the international community to take action and find a lasting solution to the conflict grows with each passing day. I’ve persistently called for Azerbaijan to lift the blockade and allow humanitarian aid to move freely via the Lachin Corridor, and I have urged President Biden to take immediate action to address the dire situation in Artsakh.”

On Wednesday, he issued a new statement which read:

“I stand with the people of Armenia, Artsakh, and the Armenian-American community – not only my constituents but those around the world. I hear and see your pain over the inhumane situation your brothers and sisters are facing.

From condemning ceasefire violations, to advocating for the release of Armenian prisoners of war, to calling for sanctions and accountability for Azerbaijan, I’ve always been, and will continue to be, steadfast in my commitment to ensuring the protection of fundamental rights for the people of Artsakh.”

I am in communication with the Biden Administration, the State Department, and my Congressional colleagues and am advocating for using all tools at our disposal, including pushing for U.S. humanitarian aid to Artsakh, cutting off military and other assistance to Azerbaijan, and imposing sanctions on those responsible for this crisis.

I will be with you every step of the way and will always stand with the people of Armenia and Artsakh.”