Lavrov, Bayramov discuss implementation of agreements of Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani leaders

 News.am 
Dec 30 2021

Russian and Azerbaijani Foreign Ministers Sergey Lavrov and Jeyhun Bayramov discussed the course of implementation of the trilateral agreements reached by the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia.

According to the press service of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, the foreign ministers summed up the results of the joint activities of the passing year, in the context of the bilateral relations between Russia and Azerbaijan, as well as the regional and international agendas.

“Success has been recorded in the Russian-Azerbaijani strategic partnership in all directions.

There was an exchange of ideas on the course of implementation of the trilateral agreements that the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia reached on November 9, 2020, January 11, 2021 and November 26, 2021. An agreement was reached to work on rapid and full implementation of the decisions made during the summits, including in the direction of the launch of mechanisms for unblocking of economic and transport links in the region and demarcation of the Azerbaijani-Armenian state border,” the press release reads.

According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan, during the talk, “the founding meeting of the ‘3+3’ format in Moscow and the meeting of Azerbaijani and Armenian public figures were discussed”.


Erdogan opens major automobile tunnel between Turkey and South Caucasus through Georgian territory

 News.am 
Dec 30 2021

President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan has opened transport communication between Turkey and the South Caucasus through Georgian territory, emphasizing that this automobile tunnel will link the countries and their economies in the region, Hurriyet reports.

“This automobile tunnel will contribute to the development of Erzurum and Ardvin as two major tourist destinations. This will also ease transit traffic to the Caucasus through these two cities,” Erdogan said in a video message on the occasion of the opening of the automobile tunnel.

The 2,246 km-long tunnel stretches from Uzundere province of Erzurum to Georgia through the bordering Ardvin city. It is expected that the investment will increase trade-economic activity between the countries of the region and will engage tourists.

According to Erdogan, the automobile tunnel will replace the old and very hazardous mountain pass, adding that the government will save nearly 18,000,000 Turkish liras thanks to the road tunnel.

Deputy police chief: Armenia has recorded a rise in the number of crimes

 News.am 
Dec 30 2021

Armenia has recorded a certain rise in the number of crimes across the country. This is what Deputy Chief of Police of Armenia Ara Fidanyan said during a briefing following the government’s session on Thursday, adding that there are objective and subjective reasons for this and that more details will be provided when the results of the year are summed up.

Fidanyan expressed confidence that the patrol service is well-established and that its work is rather fruitful.

“The fact that there are incidents and criminal cases goes to show that the Police of Armenia are open and don’t conceal anything. We also need to take into consideration how many crimes the Patrol Service has revealed. The public is content with the patrol officers’ work,” he stated.

Touching upon the case of a few police officers beating a man, he clarified that it would be inappropriate to blame the Police or the Special Investigation Service for this since the police aren’t investigating the criminal case. “The police didn’t beat him. I call on you to address the body carrying out preliminary investigation,” he added.


Is Hungary trying to make amends to Armenia?

panorama
Armenia – Dec 30 2021

Armenia’s health ministry reported on Thursday that the Hungarian government have donated 100 thousand  doses of Astrazenecca coronavirus vaccine. On Wednesday, the foreign ministry informed that through the mediation of the Government of Hungary, five Armenian prisoners of war were repatriated from Azerbaijan. 

To note, Armenia suspended diplomatic relations with Hungary in 2021 during an emergency meeting of his Security Council chaired by former president Serzh Sargsyan. The move came following the extradition of Ramil Safarov – convicted of murdering Armenian Lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan in Hungary in 2004.

“This has happened because the Government of Hungary, a member State of the European Union and NATO, has made a deal with the authorities of Azerbaijan,” Sargsyan declared then at the meeting with the heads of diplomatic missions accredited in Armenia. 

The Hungarian anti-corruption Átlátszó website later published a report, suggesting that the Orbán government’s motivation for handing back to Azerbaijan the Azeri axe murderer convicted of killing an Armenian army lieutenant in Hungary, may have been financial gain, 

In 2012, at precisely the same time that Hungary released Safarov, more than $7 million was deposited into a bank account opened at Hungary’s MKB Bank, under the name of the son of an Azeri politician. The account was linked to an offshore company that folded in 2015 and which had been closely tied to Azerbaijan’s government. The money that arrived in Hungary was transferred by a firm called Metastar Invest LLP to a Hungarian bank account linked to Velasco International Inc.

The transfer of $7 million into the mysterious MKB Bank account coincided with an improvement in diplomatic relations between Hungary and Azerbaijan. In 2014, Viktor Orbán met with President Aliyev in Budapest, where the two leaders signed a strategic partnership. 

To remind, In 2004, in Budapest Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov, who was participating in a training course within the framework “Partnership for Peace” programme, murdered Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan while he was asleep by axing him to death and attacked another Armenian officer Hayk Makuchyan. Ramil Safarov, who was sentenced to life imprisonment by the Hungarian court, was transferred to Azerbaijan, where enforcement of the sentence should have been continued. However, immediately after the transfer Ramil Safarov was pardoned and glorified. 

On May 26,2020, The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) issued a judgement in the Case of Makuchyan and Minasyan v. Azerbaijan and Hungary. The court held that there had been a procedural violation by Azerbaijan of Article 2 (right to life) of the European Convention on Human Rights and a violation of Article 14 (prohibition of discrimination). According to the judgement, there has been no justification for the Azerbaijani authorities’ failure to enforce the punishment of military officer Ramil Safarov and to in effect grant him impunity for a serious hate crime.

ECHR obliged Azerbaijan to pay the applicants jointly, within three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final, £15,143. It has found no violation by Hungary.

Pashinyan: Making decisions often does not depend only on us

panorama
Armenia – Dec 30 2021

2021 was the year of post-war repercussions, and very serious efforts were required to keep the situation in Armenia and around it controllable, Nikol Pashinyan told a cabinet meeting on Thursday, adding at the beginning of 2021 they faced that problem.

“It took huge efforts from the public administration system to be able to overcome the domestic situation in 2021 without shocks,” he said. “We encountered very serious problems in the external environment, and we still continue to encounter them. The invasion of the Azerbaijani armed forces into the Sotk-Khoznavar section since May 2021, the consequences of that act, and the incident of November 16 further underscore our security concerns.”

He proposed the participants of the meeting to observe a minute’s silence to honor all those, who sacrificed their lives for the homeland in 2021 and in the past.

Afterwards, Pashinyan referred to the plans of the government for 2022.

“We must make every effort in 2022 to make it a year of prosperity and revival. This is our main message today. It is clear that the post-war agenda and the consequences will still be felt for a long period, and we must step by step, consistently overcome this situation and try to solve all the problems that are on the foreign policy agenda. My conviction is that we must do everything in our power to find solutions. We must do our best to leave inheritance to the next generations, to the next governments, not problems that are constantly becoming more complicated, but a stable and recorded situation, which is a key precondition for ensuring the further normal development of the country,” he said

“On the other hand, of course, this is not easy; no matter how much we are willing to take responsibility for making decisions, we must also state that making those decisions often does not depend only on us. This is the most important point. We must be able to bring to maturity a process that will finally give us the opportunity to record the situation and complete the agenda of opening an era of peaceful development for Armenia and our region,” Pashinyan noted.

Zakharova comments on ‘first meeting of Armenian, Azerbaijani intellectuals’ in Moscow since war

panorama
Armenia – Dec 30 2021

On December 23-24, a meeting of Armenian and Azerbaijani public and cultural figures was held in Moscow for the first time since last year’s war in Artsakh, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told a weekly briefing broadcast by RT on Thursday.

“We believe that this meeting has served its purpose, namely, the establishment of good communication between representatives of scientific and cultural elites of the two neighboring countries with the creation of a favorable background for a consistent normalization of relations between Baku and Yerevan,” she said.

According to her, the participants were unanimous on the role of intellectuals in reducing the degree of distrust between the Azerbaijani and Armenian peoples.

“The mood for a constructive dialogue was demonstrated also during the discussion of sensitive humanitarian topics, including the return of Armenian prisoners of war by Azerbaijan and the handover of the remaining minefield maps by Armenia,” Zakharova said.

“We have supported and will continue to support such endeavors. We believe that such a unifying agenda is extremely relevant and will help reach substantial agreements, which will in turn create an atmosphere for moving forward in other directions as well.

“We are planning to hold such contacts on a regular basis in the future, including in Azerbaijan and Armenia,” Zakharova noted.

President Sarkissian, First Lady visit Yerablur military cemetery to honor fallen troops

Save

Share

 16:24,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian and First Lady Nune Sarkissian visited the Yerablur military cemetery in Yerevan to pay tribute to the fallen troops of the Artsakh war. They laid flowers at the graves of the soldiers and observed a moment of silence.

The President also laid flowers at the graves of assassinated Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsyan, military commanders Monte Melkonyan and Andranik Ozanyan.

How Biden Can Foster Real Peace in the South Caucasus

National Interest
Dec 26 2021

A multilateral approach to the Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict presents an opportunity for the United States and Russia to work together on a regional challenge where their interests overlap.

by David L. Phillips
Nagorno Karabakh (known as “Artsakh” to Armenians) was attacked by Azerbaijan on September 27, 2020. After forty-four days of war, in which Turkish drones and jihadist mercenaries shaped the battlefield in Azerbaijan’s favor, more than 4,000 Armenians were killed. Sidelining the West, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin brokered ceasefire terms on November 9, calling for Armenia to relinquish territory in Azerbaijan. The ceasefire also called for the deployment of Russian peacekeeping forces.

Columbia University has just completed a thorough implementation review of the ceasefire terms between Armenia and Azerbaijan, as well as Russia’s role.

While Armenia withdrew its forces as called for by the ceasefire terms, Azerbaijan continued its provocative and aggressive actions. It seized 41 square kilometers of Armenian territory on May 21, 2020, and launched another cross-border operation on November 14, seizing thirteen villages adjoining the city of Gabriel south of Artsakh, the southern Syunik region, and along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border near Lake Sev. 40,000 displaced Armenians are presently homeless as a result of these recent operations.

In addition to Azerbaijan’s continued cross-border aggression, the situation is aggravated by its failure to return Prisoners of War (POWs). Outside the terms of the ceasefire, Azerbaijan and Turkey now publicly demand a sovereign corridor through Armenia connecting Azerbaijan and Turkey which would be the death knell of independent Armenia. It would also eliminate the remaining Armenians of Artsakh. President Ilham Aliyev continues his war-mongering and racist hate speech. The regime of Recep Tayyip Erdogan is now pursuing negotiations with Armenia through special envoys, instead of simply establishing diplomatic relations.

Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan proposed stationing Russian troops on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan to deter ceasefire violations. Armenia filed a lawsuit with the UN International Court of Justice (ICJ), accusing Baku of violating the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. The ICJ instructed Azerbaijan to “take all necessary measures to prevent the incitement and promotion of racial hatred and discrimination including by its officials in public institutions targeted at persons of Armenian national or ethnic origin.

Further roiling tensions, Aliyev maintains that large parts of Armenia including the capital Yerevan should be included in Azerbaijan. This claim is a bargaining tactic as the countries start talks on border demarcation and transportation agreements. But it fits the authoritarian pattern of promoting false historical narratives to maintain corruption and power. Today, Azerbaijan has occupied 41 sq km of Armenia proper and frequently takes hostages. It continues to fire into Armenia without counterbalance from Russian peacekeepers who are supposed to stop such acts.

While Russia is tasked with peacekeeping and the mandated mediators including the United States and France are excluded, Russia and Turkey established their own ceasefire monitoring center. The initiative is problematic because Turkey was not a signatory to the ceasefire. As a party to the conflict, Turkey backs Azerbaijan politically and militarily.

According to Sergey Naryshkin, head of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, “We know the work of Turkish intelligence, and we see certain elements of its work.” He also indicated that Russia had obtained confirmed intelligence about the participation of Syrian mercenaries on the battlefield. “We have precise information about the presence of terrorists in the combat zone in the Karabakh region, from the Middle East, and from Syria primarily.” Turkish officials are boasting about Turkey’s role in defeating Armenians.

The Lachin corridor, which connects Armenia and Artsakh, is a flashpoint. It is patrolled by Russian peacekeepers and Azerbaijani soldiers, but there have been incidents, including explosions and the killing of Armenian civilians.

Russian peacekeepers restrict access to the Lachin corridor by international media and humanitarian organizations. Transportation talks collapsed after Azerbaijan insisted on building the Zangezur corridor through Armenia, connecting Azerbaijan and the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic, an Azerbaijani enclave in Armenia.

Azerbaijan’s detention of POWs also violates the ceasefire terms. In violation of the ceasefire terms, as well as Articles 3 and 4 of the Geneva Conventions, over 100 Armenian captives are held by Azerbaijan, which claims they are terrorists, saboteurs, and war criminals. Instead of releasing them as the ceasefire terms required, Aliyev has openly used them as bargaining chips. Ten were selectively released recently, for which Aliyev expects credit. Video evidence shows Erdogan’s wife advising Aliyev to use this tactic and hold onto the POWs in blatant violation of the ceasefire agreement and the Genevan Conventions.

POWs recount mistreatment beginning immediately upon detention. They were beaten, tortured, and humiliated by the military personnel who had taken them captive, with abuses continuing during interrogations and the duration of their time in custody. POWs were denied sufficient food or water. They were subject to sleep deprivation and minimal medical attention.

Russian peacekeepers initially played a useful role, preventing further aggression by Azerbaijan. At this stage, however, a multilateral approach would be more effective. In 1994, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe established the Minsk Group co-chaired by Russia, France, and the United States. The Minsk Group can ensure greater transparency and more effective peacekeeping operations.

The Minsk Group should accelerate talks over border demarcation and transportation agreements, while establishing buffer zones that are enforceable and effective. It can also take the lead on monitoring, calling out the perpetrators, and naming parties responsible for escalating violence.

The Minsk Group must not turn a blind eye to Turkey by allowing Ankara to establish a broader footprint in the South Caucasus. A direct transport link through Nakhichevan to Baku will destabilize the region and must be prevented. Turkey is a party to the conflict, unqualified to participate in peace enforcement. The joint Russian-Turkish peace monitoring center should be disbanded.

The Biden administration should insist on the return of all POWs and accountability for their captors. France could call on the European Court for Human Rights to play a role, which would deter future crimes.

More robust engagement would signal the U.S. commitment to stabilizing the South Caucasus, ending abuses, and furthering accountability. It would also constrain Russia’s regional ambitions.

A multilateral approach would limit Russia’s role in the post-Soviet space. It also presents an opportunity for the United States and Russia to work together on a regional conflict where their interests overlap.

David L. Phillips is Director of Columbia University’s Program on Peacebuilding and Human Rights. He served as a Senior Adviser and Foreign Affairs Expert at the State Department during the administration of Presidents Clinton, Bush, and Obama. He was also chairman of the Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission and authored the diplomatic history monograph on the Protocols for normalizing relations between Armenia and Turkey.

https://nationalinterest.org/feature/how-biden-can-foster-real-peace-south-caucasus-198406

Armenian PM: We must resolutely move towards the Armenia that our ancestors, our martyrs dreamed of

News.am, Armenia
Dec 29 2021

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan participated in a reception organized for the representatives of the public administration system on the occasion of the New Year and Christmas holidays.

In his speech, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan particularly said,

“Honorable President of the National Assembly,

Distinguished representatives of the Government, the legislative and the judicial branches,

First of all, I would like to thank all of you for the work done in 2021, because people usually complain about the work of the public system, citing bureaucracy, hassles, delays. But I want to remind you that 2021 was not an ordinary year, in fact, we felt, saw and faced a significant part of the consequences of the 44-day war in 2021. Our statehood was facing huge, dangerous challenges, and it should be stated that we were able to manage those challenges.

Of course, it was not easy, the work done by all those present, all our state bodies, local self-government bodies is of essential and key importance for the management of those challenges. I am really thankful to you for that work. Moreover, by overcoming those challenges, we not only did not damage Armenia’s international reputation as a democratic country, but, on the contrary, strengthened it even more.

Early parliamentary elections were held in the country in 2021. With them, we were able to reveal a new function of the electoral process, when the atmosphere of internal political unrest was finally overcome by the elections, and not the contrary. During those elections and before that, our entire state system, legal system and judiciary worked around the clock. Moreover, they worked trying not to yield to emotions, trying to stay loyal to the service, mission, state order. And it is obvious that in 2021 this service of addressing these challenges was a success, which does not mean that our work is perfect, on the contrary, in 2020-2021 we identified a number of systemic problems that exist in our public administration system. And an agenda has been formed, which, of course, we must consistently implement.

Our greatest challenge is ensuring external security, but I want to emphasize again that ensuring external security is not, has not been and should not be the function of only the army, the Armed Forces. It is equally the function of our diplomatic service, our other public administration bodies. I would also like to mention here the work of our special services, the important mission and work of our parliamentary diplomacy. And I want to emphasize that we have also overcome significant challenges in the field of internal security in 2021, moreover, we have overcome those challenges without any shocks. And in this regard, I want to emphasize again the work of our law enforcement agencies.

Dear attendees,
Dear colleagues,

I want to wish Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all you, your families. I want to believe that 2022 will really be a year of renascence for Armenia. I hope the shocks that took place in 2020-2021, our capability to pass that road full of those shocks, which was demonstrated, will really help and strengthen us in building a state worthy of all our martyrs who sacrificed their lives for the Motherland during the 44-day war, the four-day war that took place before it, also our victims of the previous Artsakh war. This is probably the biggest motivation we have. And this is probably the biggest motivation, which should never allow us to waver or shake under any circumstances. We must take firm steps towards the Armenia that our ancestors dreamed of, that our martyrs dreamed of, that we dream of for our generations.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!”

Five Armenian prisoners repatriated from Azerbaijan

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 29 2021

Through the mediation of the Government of Hungary, five Armenian prisoners of war were repatriated, Armenia’s foreign ministry reported on Wednesday. The ministry has also published the names of the prisoners – Sarkis Abrahamyan, Arman Khachatryan, Vahe Aghajanyan, Suren Khachatryan, Aram Avetyan. 

Earlier, the Azerbaijani sources reported that the returned servicemen had been  captured during the November 16 border incident.