Turkey’s Erdogan to speak with Armenian PM on Nagorno-Karabakh

i24, Israel
Sept 10 2023

Turkey’s Erdogan to speak with Armenian PM on Nagorno-Karabakh

The Turkish Foreign Ministry had already denounced on Saturday the election of a new separatist president in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday that he would hold talks with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pachinian on Monday, amid growing tensions between Armenia and Ankara’s historic ally Azerbaijan.

“I will have a telephone conversation, probably tomorrow, with Mr. Pachinian. What has been done in Karabakh is not appropriate. We cannot accept this”, Erdogan said after the closing of the G20 summit in New Delhi.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry had already denounced on Saturday the election of a new separatist president in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

The deputies of this mountainous territory, populated mainly by Armenians but recognized internationally as part of Azerbaijan, elected Samvel Shahramanian, 45, until then head of the separatist government’s security council, by 22 votes to one.

“Turkey does not recognize this illegitimate election, which constitutes a violation of Azerbaijan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” the Turkish Foreign Ministry protested in a statement.

Armenia accused Azerbaijan on Thursday of preparing a “military provocation” by massing its soldiers along the border between these two rival Caucasus countries and near the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Next week, Armenia will host joint military exercises with the United States, a further sign of its efforts to distance itself from its traditional Russian ally.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought two wars over the sovereignty of Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous territory inhabited mainly by Armenians but recognized internationally as part of Azerbaijan.

Tensions have risen again since early July, when Azerbaijan closed the Latchine corridor, the only road linking Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, causing shortages in the region.

Turkey’s Erdogan To Speak With Armenian PM On Nagorno-Karabakh – I24NEWS

Powerful earthquake in Morocco kills 632 people

 11:37, 9 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. A powerful earthquake struck Morocco’s High Atlas mountains late on Friday, killing at least 632 people, destroying buildings and sending residents of major cities rushing from their homes, Reuters reported citing local state television.

The number of injured stood at 329, state media reported on Saturday, citing an updated initial casualty toll from the Interior Ministry.

A local official earlier said most deaths were in mountain areas that were hard to reach.

Morocco’s geophysical centre said the quake struck in the Ighil area of the High Atlas with a magnitude of 7.2. The U.S. Geological Survey put the quake’s magnitude at 6.8 and said it was at a relatively shallow depth of 18.5 km (11.5 miles).

Armenian Ambassador to United States meets with former Türkiye MP Garo Paylan

 12:20, 9 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Ambassador to the United States Lilit Makunts on September 8 held a meeting with former Member of Parliament of Türkiye Garo Paylan.

Ambassador Makunts and Paylan “exchanged views on the security situation around Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenian-Turkish relations, as well as regional developments,” the Armenian embassy in the U.S. said in a readout.

Pashinyan praises Karen Demirchyan’s enduring legacy during inauguration of statue

 14:50, 9 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan, Deputy Mayor of Yerevan Tigran Avinyan and other government officials on September 9 attended the inauguration of the statue of Karen Demirchyan, the Speaker of Parliament of Armenia who was assassinated in 1999 during a terror attack in the Armenian parliament.

The statue was opened in front of the late politician’s namesake Sports and Concert Complex in Yerevan.

Pashinyan delivered a speech during the event, praising Demirchyan’s career and legacy.

“His idea was to transform Armenia from an agrarian country into an industrial one,” Pashinyan said.

“Unfortunately, we have to say that we’ve created far less since gaining independence than before, during Karen Demirchyan’s life. This is a problem,” he added.

The Prime Minister noted Demirchyan’s enduring popularity among the people.

“I’d like to note that during Soviet times Karen Demirchyan was never a despot, and this is one of the reasons that the people love him,” Pashinyan said.

“I don’t want to believe, and I can’t believe that the hand that opened fire at Karen Demirchyan could have any spiritual, value or humane connection with the Armenian people. I can’t believe this. I can’t believe that anyone who’d walked on this land and drank this water could’ve thought about plotting the assassination of Karen Demirchyan. That wasn’t a crime against individuals, that was a crime against the Republic of Armenia,” the Armenian PM said.

PM Pashinyan said that many people expect authorities to reveal the masterminds behind the assassination.  

He said that the re-opening of various criminal investigations has revealed evidence tampering on the highest levels of the government committed in the past. “The most recent example is the March 1 case, when the re-opened investigation revealed that the cartridge cases were collected and destroyed, then other casings were presented as evidence. But I think that it is the people’s desire, including mine, and it would be very good, it would bring great honor to Armenia, to the law enforcement system, to give concrete answers to the citizens on why and how that [assassination] happened, and who are those responsible for it,” Pashinyan said.

Karen Demirchyan’s sons Samvel and Stepan Demirchyan were also in attendance.

On October 27, 1999 a group of five heavily armed gunmen led by Nairi Hunanyan stormed into the parliament while it was in session and assassinated Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsyan, Speaker of Parliament Karen Demirchyan, Deputy Speakers Yuri Bakhshyan and Ruben Miroyan, as well as three lawmakers and a Cabinet member. The gunmen held the remaining MPs in parliament hostage until surrendering to authorities the next day.

The five perpetrators, which include Hunanyan’s younger brother and uncle, were sentenced to life in prison in 2003.

In 2020, authorities re-opened the investigation to reveal the masterminds of the attack.




Nagorno-Karabakh must obtain status, direct connection with Armenia through Lachin Corridor, says NK President-elect

 16:18, 9 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) must receive a status and direct connection with Armenia through Lachin Corridor, President-elect Samvel Shahramanyan has said.

“Nagorno-Karabakh must receive a status, and we must have direct connection with Armenia through Lachin Corridor, while other routes could be opened, but they shouldn’t replace the corridor,” Shahramanyan said after being elected President by the parliament of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“Negotiations must take place, the format [of talks] can be both multilateral and bilateral, with guarantees from a third party, Stepanakert must be a subject in the negotiations,” Shahramanyan added.

He called for the strengthening of the statehood, domestic stability, exercising the right to self-determination of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh, improving the socio-economic situation and establishing law and order.

Asbarez: Samvel Shahramanyan Elected Artsakh President

Artsakh’s newly-elected president Samvel Shahramanyan addresses parliament on Sep. 9


EU Does Not Recognize what it Calls ‘So-Called’ Elections

The Artsakh National Assembly convened a special session during which it elected Samvel Shahramanyan as the president of the republic.

Shahramanyan replaces Arayik Harutyunyan who resigned last week and appointed the newly-elected president as Artsakh’s State Minister. Earlier this week, the parliamentary factions, including the ruling bloc, endorsed Sharamanyan’s candidacy.

He was confirmed with 22 votes in favor and one opposed. An inauguration ceremony will take place on Sunday.

The status of Artsakh must be determined and a direct connection with Armenia through the Lachin Corridor must be restored, Shahramanyan told parliament after his election.

“The status of Nagorno-Karabakh must be determined, and we must have direct connection with Armenia through the Lachin Corridor. While other routes could be opened, but they cannot replace the corridor,” Shahramanyan said.

“Negotiations must take place, the format [of talks] can be both multilateral and bilateral, with guarantees from a third party. Stepanakert must be a engaged in the negotiations,” Shahramanyan added.

He called for the strengthening of Artsakh’s statehood, domestic stability, exercising the right to self-determination of the people of Artsakh, improving the socio-economic situation and establishing law and order.

Baku on Friday condemned the vote, calling it “extremely provocative.”

The European Union was quick to announce that it does not recognize the presidential elections in Artsakh, a statement from the bloc’s diplomatic service said on Saturday.

“In view of the so-called ‘presidential elections’ in Khankendi/Stepanakert on 9 September 2023, the European Union reiterates that it does not recognize the constitutional and legal framework within which they have been held. At the same time, the EU believes that it is important for the Karabakh Armenians to consolidate around de facto leadership that is able and willing to engage in result-oriented discussions with Baku. The EU is committed to supporting this process,” the European Union External Action Service said in a statement.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 09/09/2023

                                        Saturday, September 9, 2023
New Karabakh Leader Elected
Nagorno-Karabakh - Samvel Shahramanian.
Lawmakers in Nagorno-Karabakh voted to elect the region’s new president on 
Saturday amid heightened tensions along the Karabakh “line of contact” and the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
The election of Samvel Shahramanian, strongly condemned by Azerbaijan, came ten 
days after the resignation of his predecessor Arayik Harutiunian. The latter 
said that Karabakh needs new leadership in order to better cope with a severe 
humanitarian crisis resulting from the Azerbaijani blockade of the Lachin 
corridor and other challenges facing the Armenian-populated territory.
Shahramanian was backed by Harutiunian’s Free Fatherland party and three 
opposition groups. The 44-year-old has held various positions in the local 
security apparatus for over two decades. He did not make public statements 
immediately after his election.
The fifth party represented in Karabakh’s 32-seat parliament, United Fatherland, 
boycotted the vote after its leader, Samvel Babayan, was deemed ineligible to 
run for president because of not having lived in Karabakh for the past 10 ten 
years.
Babayan, who had led Karabakh’s armed forces in the 1990s, condemned his 
“illegal” disqualification and urged supporters to rally outside the parliament 
building in Stepanakert during the vote. Only a few hundred people reportedly 
gathered there. Karabakh’s leadership has implicitly accused the once powerful 
general of trying to destabilize the political situation despite the increased 
risk of another Azerbaijani attack.
Unlike the other Karabakh factions, Babayan’s party does not oppose the opening 
of a new, Azerbaijani-controlled supply route for Karabakh which Baku says is a 
precondition for allowing renewed humanitarian supplies through the Lachin 
corridor. Babayan’s detractors accuse him of secretly collaborating with 
Armenia’s government.
The government seemed in no rush to congratulate Shahramanian on his election. 
The new president was swiftly congratulated instead by some Armenian opposition 
parties.
The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry condemned Shahramanian’s election as a “blatant 
violation” of international law and Azerbaijan’s sovereignty over Karabakh. It 
claimed that Armenia and the “separatist regime” in Stepanakert “have taken the 
path of provocations and escalation of the situation.”
Pashinian Offers ‘Urgent’ Talks With Aliyev
RUSSIA - Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev and Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian attend a group photo ceremony during an informal CIS summit in St. 
Petersburg, December 26, 2022.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has offered to hold “urgent” talks with 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to prevent another upsurge in violence in the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone.
Pashinian made the offer in phone calls with French President Emmanuel Macron, 
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi reported by 
his office on Saturday. He phoned them amid rising tensions along the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border and the Karabakh “line of contact.”
The Armenian government says Azerbaijan has been massing troops there in 
possible preparation for another large-scale military assault. Pashinian on 
Thursday urged the international community to take “very serious measures” to 
thwart Baku’s alleged plans.
“Prime Minister Pashinian expressed readiness to hold urgent discussions with 
the president of Azerbaijan aimed at reducing the tensions,” read a government 
statement on his call with Macron which reportedly took place late on Friday. It 
said he also reaffirmed his recognition of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity 
made during October 2022 and May 2023 meetings with Aliyev attended by Macron.
Pashinian’s office released a virtually identical readout of his separate 
conversation with Scholz and Raisi. It said the French and German leaders 
pledged continued support for “efforts to establish peace and stability in the 
region.” It was not clear whether will try organize a fresh contact with Aliyev 
sought by Pashinian.
On Friday, three senior Azerbaijani officials met with Baku-based foreign 
diplomats to accuse Armenia of stepping up “military provocations,” “imitating” 
peace talks and continuing to foment “separatism” in Karabakh. The Armenian 
Foreign Ministry rejected the accusations as “completely false.”
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.
 

Nagorno-Karabakh’s State Minister to face confirmation hearing as President, unopposed on September 9

 13:52, 8 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. Nagorno-Karabakh’s parliament will hold a confirmation hearing to elect a new President on September 9, and the only candidate is the incumbent State Minister Samvel Shahramanyan, local authorities announced Friday.

Shahramanyan was nominated by the Free Motherland Party, Justice Party, ARF and the Artsakh Democratic Party.

The Nagorno-Karabakh parliament’s press service said that United Motherland Party nominated Samvel Babayan as a candidate but the application was turned down because the latter did not submit documents on meeting the requirements for president, particularly holding only Artsakh citizenship and residency in the past 10 years.

The parliament will convene at 11:00, September 9 for the election.

In March 2023, Nagorno-Karabakh adopted a law on continuity of government empowering parliament to elect a President in the event of the incapacitation or resignation of the incumbent president. 

On September 1, Nagorno-Karabakh President Arayik Harutyunyan resigned.

Azerbaijan releases more fake news, falsely accuses Nagorno-Karabakh of conducting fortification works

 20:57, 8 September 2023

STEPANAKERT, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani authorities released more disinformation on Friday, falsely accusing Nagorno-Karabakh’s military of carrying out fortification works in the Shushi region.

The Ministry of Defense of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) said that the Defense Army did not conduct any such activities and that the Azeri accusations are disinformation.

“The statement released by the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan claiming that the Artsakh Defense Army units conducted fortification works around 19:05, September 8 in the Shushi region, which were allegedly thwarted by the actions of Azerbaijani units, is another disinformation. By spreading fake news, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry continues to carry out the information preparations for its next provocation,” the Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Ministry said.

Yerevan Angry Over Moscow’s Inaction as Nagorny Karabakh Blockade Continues

Sept 8 2023

Russia remains cautious as Azerbaijan’s block of the region’s only gateway drags into its ninth month.

TBILISI-BASED JOURNALIST

As Azerbaijan keeps a chokehold on supplies to Nagorny Karabakh in a months-long blockade driving food and fuel shortages in the Armenian-populated territory, Russia’s reluctance in intervening to unlock the situation has soured relations between Yerevan and Moscow.

Russia has long been Armenia’s security guarantor, but in an interview released on September 3, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that depending solely on Moscow was “a strategic mistake” because it has been unable to deliver. Russian media labelled Pashinyan’s statement as “unacceptable in tone”.

On September 5, Armenia recalled Viktor Biyakov, its ambassador to the Collective Security Organisation Treaty (CSTO), the Russia-led security alliance of post-Soviet countries. He was then appointed ambassador to the Netherlands and experts noted that he was unlikely to be replaced.

In addition, on September 6, Yerevan announced joint military exercises with the US on its territory from September 11 to 20, as part of preparation for participation in international peacekeeping missions.

Stretched in Ukraine, the Kremlin has avoided getting entangled in the blockade of the Lachin corridor. Russian peacekeepers, tasked with enforcing the 2020 ceasefire between Yerevan and Baku, did little to prevent Azerbaijan from setting up checkpoints along Lachin and shutting down traffic of goods. The Azerbaijani side claims Armenia was first to violate the terms of truce and that Baku had to take measures in response. 

Baku’s victory in 2020 in the latest war over the Armenian-populated enclave, which is inside Azerbaijan’s internationally recognised territory, left the region with Lachin as the only link to the outside world: since December 2022, Baku has gradually restricted movement through the road, until it effectively sealed it off mid-June. Trucks with aid and supplies were left stranded on the Armenian side.

Dismissing these reports as exaggerations, Baku claimed that Armenia was using the route to send ammunition into Karabakh and to otherwise sabotage Azerbaijan’s push to enforce its jurisdiction over the enclave. But closing this key passage has led to mounting tensions and reduced the room for dialogue between the sides to the conflict.

“It seems that Baku’s blockade is driven by vindictiveness,” Hans Gutbrod, associate professor at Ilia State University in Tbilisi, told IWPR. “It’s hard to see this as a calculated policy since the more constructive and conciliatory approach would be much more likely to result in a last solution.”

Armenia and Azerbaijan fought two major wars over Karabakh, an Armenian-dominated autonomous region of Azerbaijan during the Soviet era. These conflicts, one from 1988–1994 and another in late 2020,  claimed tens of thousands of lives and displaced hundreds of thousands of people. 

In between these wars there were almost 30 years of chronic exchanges of fire and state-sponsored mutual threats amid futile international efforts to broker peace. 

DECADES-LONG WAR

Home to around 120,000 ethnic Armenians, the region has been de facto independent since a ceasefire was signed in 1994. Armenian troops occupied swathes of surrounding Azerbaijani lands, forming a buffer zone around the region.

In 2020, Azerbaijan reclaimed all of the occupied territories and part of Karabakh itself, and effectively encircled it from all sides. Under a Moscow-brokered armistice, Russian peacekeepers were to guarantee free and safe passage between Karabakh and Armenia through the five kilometre-wide Lachin mountain pass.

In late 2022, however, Baku effectively severed this lifeline. Supplies soon began to dwindle and shops’ shelves began to empty in the region’s main city Stepanakert, Khenkendi in Azerbaijani Aid organisations called for lifting the blockade, warning of a looming humanitarian crisis. Authorities in Karabakh, which Armenians call Artsakh, claim that Azerbaijan’s goal is to starve Armenians out of the region. On August 15, authorities reported the region’s first death from starvation.

Armenia has called for an emergency meeting of a UN Security Council to discuss the plight of its protectorate.

“The people of Karabakh are on the verge of a full-fledged humanitarian catastrophe,” Armenia’s representative to the UN, Mher Margaryan, wrote on August 11.

Azerbaijan has accused Armenia of manipulating international opinion with tales of a humanitarian crisis so as to stall the process of Karabakh’s reintegration into Azerbaijan. Yashar Aliyev, Margaryan’s Azerbaijani counterpart, said that if the situation was that bad Armenia and Karabakh would have agreed to opening up an alternative, Azerbaijan-controlled supply route.

Azerbaijan has been offering to provide essential goods to Karabakh through the Aghdam road, which would link link Karabakh to mainland Azerbaijan.

While the EU backed Baku’s proposal, Karabakh residents refused it as marking the effective legitimation of Azerbaijan’s rule over the region.

“Aghdam road is a road to ethnic cleansing,” said placards held by protesters from Karabakh on July 18, as they barricaded the entry from Aghdam.

Azerbaijani border guards’ treatment of Karabakh citizens at the Lachin checkpoint, most notably the arrest of a 65-year-old Karabakh resident on allegations of committing war crimes 30 years ago, has also hampered building trust between the sides.  

Humanitarian organisations, international observers and diplomats, including EU High Commissioner Josep Borrell, said that the Aghdam road cannot serve as a substitute to Lachin road, and not just because of the mistrust between the warring sides.

“Aghdam road is not an alternative,” Olesya Vartanyan, a South Caucasus analyst with the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-headquartered think-tank, told IWPR. “After you had been using one road for 30 years, get all of your supplies through that road and have an infrastructure set up, you can’t just switch away from it overnight.”    

Convened at the behest of Armenia, UN Security Council members called on August 17 for the reopening of the Lachin corridor. The Russian representative suggested using both Lachin and Aghdam for supplies.

Baku has insisted all along that the Lachin corridor is open, at least to the movement of civilians. In August Azerbaijani television aired reports showing Armenians going through the checkpoint and Baku stated that this disproved the Armenian claims of a blockade.

Reached by IWPR, Karabakh’s de-facto authorities confirmed that there “no free exit or entry to Artsakh”. 

“No goods, supplies and even medication are allowed through,” the de-facto foreign ministry said in a written response to IWPR’s query. “Sometimes Azerbaijan allows the transportation of seriously ill patients to Armenia. Two days ago [in late August] it was possible to arrange the departure of a group of students, who study in higher education institutions of Armenia or other countries. But in general the situation hasn’t changed.”

International pressure has been mounting on Azerbaijan, but Baku remains defiant, at least in its public statements.

“Internationally, the situation is so liquid that it’s no guarantee that international attention alone with be enough to lift the blockade, in whole or part,” said Gutbrod. “The West does have some leverage, but it is also facing multiple crises at the same time.”

https://iwpr.net/global-voices/yerevan-angry-over-moscows-inaction-nagorny-karabakh-blockade-continues