U.S. Congress Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission to hold hearing on blockade of Lachin Corridor

 10:59, 1 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. The United States Congress Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission will hold a on September 6 on the ongoing blockade of the Lachin corridor. This will be the second on Nagorno-Karabakh this year at the commission.

Luis Moreno Ocampo, the former Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, released his personal Expert Opinion on August 7, stating that “there is a reasonable basis to believe that a Genocide is being committed against Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2023” and emphasizing that under the Genocide Conventions all states have a “duty to prevent” genocide. At the Mr. Ocampo will present his Expert Opinion on the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission said in a press release.

David L. Phillips, Adjunct Professor, Georgetown University, and Director of Columbia University’s Artsakh Atrocities Project, will testify on facts relevant to gathering the intent of the government of Azerbaijan, including as available on the web page “Atrocities Artsakh.”

This will be open to Members of Congress, congressional staff, the interested public, and the media. The will be livestreamed via the Commission website.

The Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission held a  on June 21 on Safeguarding the People of Nagorno-Karabakh.

https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1118527.html?fbclid=IwAR3HaUY4fgfGjmdzcK6SAHDReOT2AhSpHaozCaFIJbveKnSYNbVDILhawEA

Azeri military targets more Armenian border outposts in Gegharkunik Province

 12:45, 1 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani military opened small arms fire at Armenian border outposts near Norabak hours after shelling another outpost near Sotk, the Armenian Ministry of Defense has said. 

“On September 1, at around 12:25 p.m., Azerbaijani armed forces units fired from fire arms towards the Armenian combat outposts nearby Norabak,” the Armenian Ministry of Defense said in a statement.

Starvation: ‘The Invisible Genocide Weapon’

Sept 3 2023
  • Several watchdog organizations… are accusing Azerbaijan of committing genocide against the 120,000 Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh. Historically known as Artsakh, this ancient Armenian region was brought under Azerbaijani rule in 2020.

  • Modern day hostilities between Armenia, an ancient nation and the first to adopt Christianity, and Azerbaijan, a Muslim nation that was created in 1918, began in September 2020, when Azerbaijan launched a war to capture Artsakh….

  • Once the September 2020 war began, Turkey quickly joined its Azerbaijani co-religionists against Armenia, even though the dispute did not concern it.

  • These Muslim groups committed massive atrocities. One included raping an Armenian female soldier and mother of three, before hacking off all four of her limbs, gouging out her eyes, and sticking one of her severed fingers inside her private parts.

  • The war ended in November 2020, with Azerbaijan gaining control of a significant portion of Artsakh.

  • "In the extreme southeastern part of Europe, known as the Caucasus, a silent genocide is looming. The Lachin Corridor that connects Armenia to Artsakh, the region in Azerbaijan where mainly Christian Armenians live, has been closed by the government for eight months. Supermarket shelves are empty; there is hardly any food, fuel, or medicine for the 120,000 Armenian Christians who live there, including 30,000 children and 20,000 seniors… a convoy of food and medicine has been standing in front of the border since July 25 [a month], but the International Red Cross is not allowed access to the inhabitants of Artsakh. According to journalists living in the area, most residents only get one meal a day. People in Artsakh queue for hours at night for bread, waiting for their daily rations. At the same time, sources within Artsakh report shooting at Armenians trying to harvest the land… in all probability bread will also soon be unavailable due to the shortage of fuel… Bakers can no longer heat their ovens." — Sonja Dahlmans, Dutch journalist, ongehoordnederland.tv, August 24, 2023.

  • "There is an ongoing Genocide against 120,000 Armenians…[A] blockade… by the Azerbaijani security forces impeding access to any food, medical supplies, and other essentials should be considered a Genocide under Article II, (c) of the Genocide Convention: 'Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction.'….Without immediate dramatic change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed in a few weeks." — Luis Moreno Ocampo, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, August 7, 2023.

  • Muslim regimes regularly make life intolerable for Christian minorities, apparently to force them to abandon their properties and leave.

  • A few weeks ago, the president of Iraq revoked a decade-old decree that granted Chaldean Patriarch Cardinal Louis Raphael Sako powers over Christian endowment affairs. "This is a political maneuver to seize the remainder of what Christians have left in Iraq and Baghdad and to expel them." — Diya Butrus Slewa, human rights activist from Ainkawa, aina.org, July 13, 2023.

  • Former U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom Sam Brownback referred to the blockade as the latest attempt at "religious cleansing" of Christian Armenia… in his testimony, [he] said that this latest genocide is being "perpetrated with U.S.-supplied weaponry and backed by Turkey, a member of NATO." If the U.S. does not act, "we will see again another ancient Christian population forced out of its homeland." — catholicnewsagency.com, June 21, 2023.

  • Not only has U.S. diplomacy been ineffective for the besieged Armenians; it has actually exacerbated matters by allowing the aggressors to continue their atrocities.

  • "[T]he only thing the Washington-backed talks appear to have produced is the emboldenment of Azerbaijan's aggression…. For over eight months, the region's 120,000 Indigenous Armenians…have been deprived access to food, medicine, fuel, electricity, and water in what is nothing less than genocide by attrition…. When Washington-based talks resumed in June, Azerbaijan began shelling the region. In the months since, the International Committee of the Red Cross has been denied access to Karabakh—and later reported that an Armenian patient in its care had been abducted by Azerbaijani forces en route to Armenia for treatment. This is the predictable consequence of Washington's insistence on negotiations amid Azerbaijan's blockade of Artsakh and occupation of Armenian territory. It has signaled to Baku that its strategy of coercive diplomacy is working, disincentivizing de-escalation…" — Alex Galitsky and Gev Iskajyan, Armenian National Committee of America; Armenian National Committee of Artsakh, Newsweek, August 14, 2023.

  • Indeed, part of the façade of diplomacy is that Azerbaijan insists that the Christian Armenians of Artsakh are being treated no differently than Muslim Azerbaijanis—since all are citizens of Azerbaijan.

  • Clearly, negotiating simply bought the Azerbaijanis more time in which to starve the Armenians, and possibly another way for the United States to pretend it was "doing something" without actually doing anything –apart from allowing more savagery.

  • The results are clear: nearly every Armenian who fell into Azerbaijani captivity after the 2020 war has been persecuted, imprisoned, tortured, mutilated, decapitated or murdered. None of these acts has ever been punished. To the contrary, those who kill Armenians receive medals and are glorified in Azerbaijan.

  • "The Western press rarely writes about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Most reactions follow the line that it is not a religious conflict, but a claim by two countries over a disputed territory. Given the many examples that exist in which precisely religious buildings, tombs and inscriptions are systematically destroyed, it is difficult to maintain that this is the case." — Sonja Dahlmans, ongehoordnederland.tv, August 24, 2023.

  • "Azerbaijan was able to impose this blockade because Russian peacekeepers allow them to do so…. Although Russia is often portrayed as Armenia's patron, the reality is more complicated. Russia's largest oil company owns a 19.99% share of Azerbaijan's largest natural gas field." — Associated Press, August 9, 2023.


The thousand-year-old genocide of Armenians at the hands of Turkic peoples has reached a new level.

Several watchdog organizations — including the International Association of Genocide Scholars, Genocide Watch, and the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention — are accusing Azerbaijan of committing genocide against the 120,000 Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh. Historically known as Artsakh, this ancient Armenian region was brought under Azerbaijani rule in 2020.

Modern day hostilities between Armenia, an ancient nation and the first to adopt Christianity, and Azerbaijan, a Muslim nation that was created in 1918, began in September 2020, when Azerbaijan launched a war to capture Artsakh. Although it had been Armenian for more than 2,000 years and its population still remains 90% Armenian, after the dissolution of the USSR, the "border makers" granted it to the Republic of Azerbaijan, hence the constant warring over this region.

Once the September 2020 war began, Turkey quickly joined its Azerbaijani co-religionists against Armenia, even though the dispute did not concern it. It dispatched sharia-enforcing "jihadist groups" from Syria and Libya — including the pro-Muslim Brotherhood Hamza Division, which once kept naked women chained and imprisoned — to terrorize and slaughter Armenians.

One of these captured mercenaries later confessed that he was "promised a monthly $2,000 payment for fighting against 'kafirs' in Artsakh, and an extra 100 dollar[s] for each beheaded kafir." (Kafir, often translated as "infidel," is Arabic for any non-Muslim who fails to submit to Islam, which makes them de facto enemies.)

These Muslim groups committed massive atrocities (here and here). One included raping an Armenian female soldier and mother of three, before hacking off all four of her limbs, gouging out her eyes, and sticking one of her severed fingers inside her private parts.

The war ended in November 2020, with Azerbaijan gaining control of a significant portion of Artsakh.

Then, on December 12, 2022, Azerbaijan sealed off the humanitarian Lachin Corridor — the only route between Artsakh and the outside world. A recent report by the Dutch journalist Sonja Dahlmans summarizes the current situation:

"In the extreme southeastern part of Europe, known as the Caucasus, a silent genocide is looming. The Lachin Corridor that connects Armenia to Artsakh, the region in Azerbaijan where mainly Christian Armenians live, has been closed by the government for eight months. Supermarket shelves are empty; there is hardly any food, fuel, or medicine for the 120,000 Armenian Christians who live there, including 30,000 children and 20,000 seniors.

"At the time of this writing [Aug. 24, 2023], a convoy of food and medicine has been standing in front of the border since July 25 [a month], but the International Red Cross is not allowed access to the inhabitants of Artsakh. According to journalists living in the area, most residents only get one meal a day. People in Artsakh queue for hours at night for bread, waiting for their daily rations. At the same time, sources within Artsakh report shooting at Armenians trying to harvest the land…

"[I]n all probability bread will also soon be unavailable due to the shortage of fuel… Bakers can no longer heat their ovens. Last week, a 40-year-old Armenian man died of malnutrition. A pregnant woman lost her child because there was no fuel for transport to the hospital."

Separate reports tell of 19 humanitarian trucks "loaded with some 360 tons of medicine and food supplies" that have been parked for weeks and prevented from crossing.

This is not the first time Turks starve Armenians to death (as this 1915 picture of a Turkish administrator taunting emaciated Armenian children with a piece of bread makes clear).

On August 7, 2023, Luis Moreno Ocampo, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, framed the situation:

"There is an ongoing Genocide against 120,000 Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Artsakh.

"The blockade of the Lachin Corridor by the Azerbaijani security forces impeding access to any food, medical supplies, and other essentials should be considered a Genocide under Article II, (c) of the Genocide Convention: 'Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction.'

"There are no crematories, and there are no machete attacks. Starvation is the invisible Genocide weapon. Without immediate dramatic change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed in a few weeks.

"Starvation as a method to destroy people was neglected by the entire international community when it was used against Armenians in 1915, Jews and Poles in 1939, Russians in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) in 1941, and Cambodians in 1975/1976."

Similarly, after going on a fact-finding mission to Armenia, former U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom Sam Brownback referred to the blockade as the latest attempt at "religious cleansing" of Christian Armenia:

"Azerbaijan, with Turkey's backing, is really slowly strangling Nagorno-Karabakh. 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."

Muslim regimes regularly make life intolerable for Christian minorities, apparently to force them to abandon their properties and leave. A few weeks ago, the president of Iraq revoked a decade-old decree that granted Chaldean Patriarch Cardinal Louis Raphael Sako powers over Christian endowment affairs. "This is a political maneuver to seize the remainder of what Christians have left in Iraq and Baghdad and to expel them," said Diya Butrus Slewa, a human rights activist from Ainkawa. "Unfortunately, this is a blatant targeting of the Christians and a threat to their rights."

In Artsakh, the situation seems to be worse: just as no one can get in, apparently no one can get out. Azerbaijan is holding those 120,000 Armenians captive, starving and abusing them at will.

Brownback, in his testimony, said that this latest genocide is being "perpetrated with U.S.-supplied weaponry and backed by Turkey, a member of NATO." If the U.S. does not act, "we will see again another ancient Christian population forced out of its homeland."

Not only has U.S. diplomacy been ineffective for the besieged Armenians; it has actually exacerbated matters by allowing the Azerbaijanis to continue their atrocities. According to one report:

"[T]he only thing the Washington-backed talks appear to have produced is the emboldenment of Azerbaijan's aggression….

"For over eight months, the region's 120,000 Indigenous Armenians—who declared their independence in the early 1990s following escalating violence and ethnic cleansing by Azerbaijan—have been deprived access to food, medicine, fuel, electricity, and water in what is nothing less than genocide by attrition….

"The same week peace talks began in Washington, Baku [capital of Azerbaijan] tightened its blockade by establishing a military checkpoint at the Lachin Corridor. When Washington-based talks resumed in June, Azerbaijan began shelling the region. In the months since, the International Committee of the Red Cross has been denied access to Karabakh—and later reported that an Armenian patient in its care had been abducted by Azerbaijani forces en route to Armenia for treatment.

"This is the predictable consequence of Washington's insistence on negotiations amid Azerbaijan's blockade of Artsakh and occupation of Armenian territory. It has signaled to Baku that its strategy of coercive diplomacy is working, disincentivizing de-escalation, and forcing Armenia to negotiate with a gun to its head…

"Washington has also actively strengthened Azerbaijan's position by indicating support for Artsakh's integration into Azerbaijan. Given Azerbaijan's state-sponsored dehumanization of Armenians, the litany of human rights abuses perpetrated during and since the 2020 war, and its own disastrous domestic human rights record—it is impossible to imagine Armenians could ever live freely under Azerbaijan's rule.

"For Azerbaijan, this disingenuous participation in negotiations has allowed it to uphold the veneer of cooperation while engaging in conduct that has immeasurably set back the prospects of a durable peace."

Clearly, negotiating simply bought the Azerbaijanis more time in which to starve the Armenians, and possibly another way for the United States to pretend it was "doing something" without actually doing anything — apart from allowing more savagery.

Indeed, part of the façade of diplomacy is that Azerbaijan insists that the Christian Armenians of Artsakh are being treated no differently than Muslim Azerbaijanis — since all are citizens of Azerbaijan. One report sheds light on this farce:

"Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and other officials have declared that the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh are citizens of Azerbaijan, seeming to back prior statements of Azerbaijani authorities pledging to guarantee the rights and security of ethnic Armenians.

"But actions speak much louder. The First Nagorno-Karabakh War three decades ago arose following waves of anti-Armenian pogroms. Azerbaijan is now one of the most repressive and autocratic countries in the world, scoring among the lowest in the world on freedom and democracy indexes—in stark contrast to Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

"Aliyev (who inherited his post from his father) has confessed to having started the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War in 2020, and proudly admitted that a generation of Azerbaijanis has been brought up to deeply despise Armenians (here and here). He denies the Armenian Genocide (alongside Turkey) and negates the existence of Armenians as a nation, including their history, culture, and right to be present anywhere in the region.

"No Armenian, not even a foreign national of ethnic Armenian descent or anyone with an Armenian sounding name, is allowed to enter Azerbaijan.

"The results are clear: nearly every Armenian who fell into Azerbaijani captivity after the 2020 war has been persecuted, imprisoned, tortured, mutilated, decapitated or murdered. None of these acts has ever been punished. To the contrary, those who kill Armenians receive medals and are glorified in Azerbaijan. It is no wonder that Armenians are petrified and cannot fathom living under Azerbaijan's authority."

Aside from the Lachin Corridor crisis, a recent 12-page report documents the systematic destruction of ancient churches, crosses, Christian cemeteries, and other cultural landmarks on land — Artsakh — that historically belonged to the world's oldest Christian nation, Armenia.

One example is the Holy Savior Cathedral in Shushi, Artsakh. First, Azerbaijan bombed the church during the 2020 war, an act Human Rights Watch labeled a "possible war crime." Then, after the war, with Azerbaijan having seized the area, officials claimed to be "restoring" the church, when in fact its dome and cross were removed, making the building look less like a church. As one report notes:

"The 'case' of Shushi is indicative of the well-documented history of Armenian cultural and religious destruction by Azerbaijan. From 1997 to 2006, Azerbaijan systematically obliterated almost all traces of Armenian culture in the Nakhichevan area, which included the destruction of medieval churches, thousands of carved stone crosses ("khachkars"), and historical tombstones."

Dahlmans also reports:

"[A]n Armenian church in Artsakh… disappeared after Azerbaijan's victory in the second Nagorno-Karabakh war (2020). During the victory, Azerbaijani soldiers pose on top of the church shouting 'Allahu Akbar'… [T]he church has been completely wiped out and only a few stones remain as a reminder…

"The Western press rarely writes about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Most reactions follow the line that it is not a religious conflict, but a claim by two countries over a disputed territory. Given the many examples that exist in which precisely religious buildings, tombs and inscriptions are systematically destroyed, it is difficult to maintain that this is the case. "

One of the main reasons that Armenia finds itself standing alone against this genocidal onslaught is due to the West's "desire to maintain favorable relations with Azerbaijan given its role as a European energy partner [and this] has outweighed any purported commitment to upholding human rights—bolstering Azerbaijan's aggression."

It is these same priorities that have made Russia, once the defender of all Orthodox Christian nations in the East, more apathetic than might be expected. According to another report:

"Azerbaijan was able to impose this blockade because Russian peacekeepers allow them to do so. The Russians are there as part of a ceasefire agreement ending the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. The same agreement, inked by Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2020, guarantees access along that now-blocked road. Although Russia is often portrayed as Armenia's patron, the reality is more complicated. Russia's largest oil company owns a 19.99% share of Azerbaijan's largest natural gas field. It is not so surprising then that Armenians in Artsakh demonstrated against Russian inaction after the killings of their police officials."

Longtime Armenian-activist, Lucine Kasbarian, author of Armenia: A Rugged Land, an Enduring People, sums up the situation:

"We who are Armenian, Assyrian, Greek and Coptic bitterly know just how this will end. It's deja vu all over again. Again and again, we've seen the deceit and brutality, received the chilling reports, warnings, graphic videos, open letters and petitions from alarmed genocide scholars. But alas, NATO, Islamic supremacism, gas and oil are going to take precedence over life and liberty once again unless high-powered vigilantism can save the day."

Raymond Ibrahim, author of Defenders of the West, Sword and Scimitar, Crucified Again, and The Al Qaeda Reader, is the Distinguished Senior Shillman Fellow at the Gatestone Institute and the Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle East Forum.



Armenian PM says depending solely on Russia for security was ‘strategic mistake’

Reuters
Sept 3 2023
  • Armenian PM makes sharp criticism of Russia
  • Says it looks like it's leaving the wider region
  • Accuses Russian peacekeepers of failing to do job
  • Says it was a mistake to rely only on Moscow for security

LONDON, Sept 3 (Reuters) – Armenia's prime minister has said his country's policy of solely relying on Russia to guarantee its security was a strategic mistake because Moscow has been unable to deliver and is in the process of winding down its role in the wider region.

In an interview with Italian newspaper La Repubblica published on Sunday, Nikol Pashinyan accused Russia of failing to ensure Armenia's security in the face of what he said was aggression from neighbouring Azerbaijan over the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Pashinyan suggested that Moscow, which has a defence pact with Armenia and a militray base there, did not regard his country as sufficiently pro-Russian and said he believed Russia was in the process of leaving the wider South Caucasus region.

Yerevan was therefore trying to diversify its security arrangements, he said, an apparent reference to its ties with the European Union and the United States and its attempts to forge closer ties with other countries in the region.

"Armenia's security architecture was 99.999% linked to Russia, including when it came to the procurement of arms and ammunition," Pashinyan told La Repubblica.

"But today we see that Russia itself is in need of weapons, arms and ammunition (for the war in Ukraine) and in this situation it's understandable that even if it wishes so, the Russian Federation cannot meet Armenia's security needs.

"This example should demonstrate to us that dependence on just one partner in security matters is a strategic mistake."

His words underscore resentment inside Armenia about what many there see as a failure by Russia to defend their interests.

There was no immediate response to Pashinyan's interview from Moscow, which has chaired talks between Yerevan and Baku in what it says is the complex search for a peace deal.

Moscow has in the past bridled at such criticism, defended its actions, and rejected the idea that it has downgraded its foreign policy priorities because of Ukraine.

Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan but its 120,000 inhabitants are predominantly ethnic Armenians. It broke away from Baku's control in a war in the early 1990s. Heavy fighting took place again in 2020 until Russia brokered ceasefire.

Pashinyan accused Russian peacekeepers deployed to uphold the ceasefire deal of failing to do their job.

Reporting by Andrew Osborn Editing by Angus MacSwan

Azerbaijan’s aggressive behavior could seriously disrupt peace efforts, warns Armenia after deadly attack

 17:37, 1 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has strongly condemned Azerbaijan’s military aggression targeting Armenian border positions in Gegharkunik province and warned that Baku’s actions could seriously disrupt the efforts aimed at establishing stability and lasting peace in the region.

In a statement released Friday, the Armenian foreign ministry called on the international community to restrain Azerbaijan’s growing maximalist behavior.

Below is the full statement issued by the foreign ministry.

“On September 1, the armed forces of Azerbaijan opened fire on the positions of the armed forces of the Republic of Armenia located in the area of Sotk and Norabak in the Gegharkunik region, which resulted in casualties of 4 killed and 1 wounded. Azerbaijan’s armed forces also used mortars and UAVs,

“During this period, the Republic of Armenia has repeatedly signaled that Azerbaijan, aiming at carrying out pre-planned military actions, deliberately and systematically is spreading disinformation. 

“The encroachments against the territorial integrity of Armenia, combined with the statements and bellicose rhetoric regularly made by the Azerbaijani side on various levels as well as channeled through various state media, are the continuation of Baku's aggressive policy aimed at settling existing problems and imposing its own will through the use of force and the threat of use of force.

“Under the conditions of targeted calls and growing pressure to lift the illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor, Azerbaijan’s provocation is also aimed at diverting the attention of the international community and avoiding the fulfillment of its obligations.

“We strongly condemn this kind of aggressive behavior of Azerbaijan, which is accompanied by the factual siege of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh through the 8-month-long illegal blockade of the Lachin Corridor, and can seriously disrupt the efforts aimed at establishing stability and lasting peace in the region. The Republic of Armenia reaffirms its principled position that all units of Azerbaijan’s armed forces must be withdrawn from the sovereign territory of Armenia.

“We call on the international community and the actors interested in real stability in the region to restrain Azerbaijan’s daily increasing maximalist behavior through the existing mechanisms and active and clear steps in order to prevent further escalation of the situation and to bring Azerbaijan to a constructive track.”

Defense Ministry reports ‘relatively stable’ situation on border

 17:51, 1 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. The situation on the border has stabilized, the Armenian Ministry of Defense said after a day of intense gunfire from Azerbaijan.

“As of 17:30, the situation on the frontline was relatively stable,” the Defense Ministry said, adding that it would provide updates in case of any changes in the situation.

4 Armenian soldiers were killed and one was wounded when Azerbaijani armed forces opened small arms fire, and launched mortar and UAV strikes at Armenian border outposts in Gegharkunik province.

Opinion | Is Armenians’ Ethnic Cleansing Happening Once More?

VIGOUR TIMES
Sept 2 2023

The war in Ukraine is already horrifying, with Russian torture chambers and the slaughter of civilians. However, there is another country taking advantage of the chaos to commit its own crimes against humanity.

Allow me to introduce Azerbaijan.

You may not be familiar with Azerbaijan’s brutality towards the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, but it definitely deserves our attention. Luis Moreno Ocampo, the former chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, who I’ve known since he sought accountability for the genocide in Sudan’s Darfur region, now compares the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh to a genocide.

In a recent report, Ocampo wrote, “There is an ongoing genocide against 120,000 Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh.”

When we think of genocide, we typically imagine mass killings. However, according to the 1948 Genocide Convention, it encompasses a broader definition that includes “acts committed with intent to destroy” a specific ethnic, racial, or religious group, even without mass killings.

Ocampo argues that Azerbaijan is carrying out this genocide by blockading Nagorno-Karabakh, causing people to die or flee and effectively erasing an ancient community. Starvation, he emphasizes, is the invisible weapon of genocide. Without immediate intervention, he warns that this group of Armenians will be destroyed within weeks.

Labeling this as genocide is of critical importance, according to Ocampo. It is crucial for the United States, Britain, and other world powers to step up pressure on Azerbaijan.

The concept of genocide emerged in response to the mass killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire in 1915 and 1916, making Azerbaijan’s starvation tactics a chilling echo of history. Organizations like Genocide Watch, the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention, and the International Association of Genocide Scholars have all issued warnings about the risk of genocide and called for Azerbaijan to be held accountable for its crimes against humanity.

The crisis began when Azerbaijanis began blockading the only road into Nagorno-Karabakh, the Lachin corridor to Armenia, which is essential for the territory’s supply of food and medicine.

Reports from Nagorno-Karabakh paint a bleak picture. “People are fainting in the bread queues,” says a local journalist quoted by the BBC. The Halo Trust, a nonprofit dedicated to clearing minefields, had to suspend operations because its staff were too exhausted from queuing for bread all night and returning home empty-handed. A third of deaths in Nagorno-Karabakh are attributed to malnutrition, according to local authorities. While I cannot independently verify these reports, the evidence suggests a dire situation that is worsening day by day.

Unfortunately, it seems that the West is fatigued and focused on its own internal issues. It has shown little attention to global crises beyond Ukraine, from atrocities in Ethiopia to Sudan’s warlords slaughtering civilians. Dictators find this to be an opportune time to commit war crimes.

To understand the conflict, it’s essential to note that authoritarian Azerbaijan has a predominantly Muslim population speaking a Turkic language, while Nagorno-Karabakh has a mostly Christian population that speaks Armenian. When the Soviet Union collapsed, Nagorno-Karabakh sought independence. A war ensued, ending with a stalemate where the enclave operated autonomously but maintained close ties with neighboring Armenia. In 2020, Azerbaijan waged a brief war, retaking most of the enclave and now aiming to reclaim the rest, likely intending to displace much of the ethnic Armenian population.

While the world, including Armenia’s prime minister, recognizes that Nagorno-Karabakh’s sovereignty belongs to Azerbaijan, Azerbaijan argues for the political and economic integration of the territory with the rest of the country. However, what Azerbaijan is doing is not integration; it is starvation. Both the United States and Russia agree that Azerbaijan should reopen the Lachin corridor and end the suffering.

One potential compromise is outlined by Benyamin Poghosyan of the Applied Policy Research Institute of Armenia. Azerbaijan would open the Lachin road while Nagorno-Karabakh simultaneously opens one or more roads into Azerbaijan. The U.S. State Department hinted at this approach in a statement condemning the blockade. As part of the compromise, Azerbaijan would guarantee the freedom of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Admittedly, this compromise is unsatisfactory, as it rewards Azerbaijan for starving civilians, and there is skepticism about Azerbaijan’s promises. However, diplomats often have to devise flawed agreements that are preferable to the alternatives. In this case, a defective deal is better than mass starvation and ethnic cleansing of Armenians.

https://vigourtimes.com/opinion-is-armenians-ethnic-cleansing-happening-once-more/

The Armenian Defense Ministry accused the Azerbaijani Armed Forces of shelling positions on the border.

Sept 2 2023

On Saturday, the Armenian Defense Ministry accused the Azerbaijani side of shelling the positions of the Armenian army located in the direction of the settlement of Norabak (Gegharkunik region of Armenia), the Azerbaijani defense ministry denied this information.

Earlier on Friday, Yerevan announced four dead soldiers due to shelling on the border, Baku – two wounded. Later, the Armenian Defense Ministry reported that it had received a new medical opinion, according to which, as a result of intensive resuscitation, one of the four servicemen who were considered dead, Narek Poghosyan, had a heartbeat restored. The Ministry of Defense removed him from the list of the dead.

“On September 2, from 16:00 to 16:10, units of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces opened fire from small arms on Armenian positions located in the Norabak region,” the press service of the Armenian Defense Ministry said.

In turn, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry denied this information.

“The information spread by the Armenian side about the alleged shelling of the units of the Armenian armed forces on the border by the units of the Azerbaijani army on September 2 from 16:00 to 16:10 does not correspond to reality. We categorically refute the information spread by the Armenian Ministry of Defense,” the press service of Azerbaijani Defense Ministry reports.


Skirmishes periodically take place on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The last serious aggravation occurred on the night of September 13, 2022.


Last year, Yerevan and Baku, mediated by Russia, the United States and the European Union, began discussing a future peace treaty. At the end of May 2023, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced that his country would recognize the sovereignty of Azerbaijan along with the territory of Karabakh, on a total area of 86.6 thousand square kilometers. Azerbaijani leader Ilham Aliyev said that Azerbaijan and Armenia may sign a peace treaty in the near future if Yerevan does not change its position.

https://www.politicallore.com/the-armenian-defense-ministry-accused-the-azerbaijani-armed-forces-of-shelling-positions-on-the-border/37364

Inside the forgotten conflict that threatens to end in mass starvation and genocide

UK – Sept 2 2023
By JOHN VARGA

A resident of the blockaded Armenian enclave in Nagorno-Karanach has told Express.co.uk that people are facing "mass starvation and total hunger" as food supplies run low.

She said that the only readily available food item was bread and that people were fainting from hunger and exhaustion while queuing for up to six hours to buy it.

The Republic of Artsakh is a breakaway state in the South Caucasus, whose territory is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan. Its population consists of around 120,000 Armenians who are insisting on the right to self-determination and independence from Baku.

The disputed territory has been at the centre of a decades long conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, resulting in two major wars that have resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of people.

In the war of 2020, Azerbaijan recaptured most of the territory it lost in 1994, leaving the Republic of Artsakh with just a fraction of the land it once controlled and isolated from mainland Armenia.

As a part of a trilateral peace agreement, a land corridor was established that connected the Republic of Artsakh with Armenia. Known as the Lachin Road corridor, this route was intended to allow humanitarian aid and food to reach the Armenian enclave in Nagorno-Karabakh.

However, the Azerbaijanis started to blockade the road in December of last year, initially by using environmental activists who claimed they were protesting against ecological damage caused by gold and copper mining in Artsakh.

Despite the protests, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) was still able to deliver limited supplies of aid, that included food and medication. But in April the Azeris installed checkpoints on their side of the border and since June 15 no humanitarian supplies have been able to get through along the road, leaving the residents of Artsakh in a desperate plight.

Mary Asatryan works as an assistant to the Human Rights Defender of Artsakh in the enclave's capital Stepanakert. She told Express.co.uk that all spheres of life had been paralysed by the blockade and that hundreds of people were facing starvation.

With most shops and supermarkets closed, the only products readily available to buy are bread, as well as some seasonal vegetables and fruit that local farmers and villagers are able to grow on their land. However once the summer is over, the situation could become even more critical.

"In a few weeks when the growing season is over – and I am talking about tomatoes, cucumbers and potatoes which are staple food products – when those products run out and the growing season ends we will face mass starvation and total hunger," she said.

Deaths from starvation are already starting to happen. In one recent incident a 40-year-old man from Stepanakert died as a result of chronic malnutrition, protein and energy deficiency.

Ms Asatryan said people were living from day to day as regards food and were having to queue for up to six hours just to buy bread.

"People are fainting a lot, especially while queueing," she explained. "There is widespread exhaustion and depression – people are stressed and anxious because they don't know what to expect tomorrow."

The Azeris have also targeted critical civilian infrastructure, cutting off gas and electricity supplies, as well as access to the internet. More than 80 per cent of the population rely on gas to heat their homes and for cooking.

The Armenians are still able to produce some electricity locally through the Sarsang Hydro Power Plant, but it is not enough to meet all the demands of the population, meaning there are daily rolling blackouts.

Water supplies have also been disrupted, resulting in households going without for over a week in some instances.

"Two weeks ago the water supply to my neighbourhood was cut and I didn't have water for 6 to 7 days," Ms Asatryan said.

"I had to get water from my friends. On one occasion my entire day – it was a Sunday – was spent finding water and then queuing for bread. The organisation of normal life, of meeting one's basic needs takes so much effort now, people don't have any time for other things – so people are struggling all day long just to meet their most basic needs."

Ms Asatryan's organisation closely monitors the health and wellbeing of expectant mothers, who have been disproportionately affected by the blockade.

"Basically we have 2,000 pregnant women in Artsakh – all of them lack proper nutrition, they don't have rich vitamin diets," she explained. "It's not enough to provide for a healthy child and miscarriages have tripled in number through the period."

The Azeris insist that Artsakh is a part of Azerbaijan and cannot be regarded as an independent state. They say the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh must accept that reality and live under the direct rule of Baku.

The Armenians, however, believe they will be persecuted by the Azeris if they are forced to give up their right to self-determination, given their long history of ethnic conflict. And that this persecution could have catastrophic consequences.

"The red line for people here would be becoming part of Azerbaijan which they would definitely not tolerate," Ms Asatryan said. "The level of Armeno-phobia in Azerbaijan is unimaginable and it's unrealistic to speak of co-existence. Nobody guarantees the security of Armenians under the rule of Azerbaijan given their openly Armeno-phobic rhetoric which has been documented by the European Court for Human Rights.

"How can you place a population of Armenian origin under the rule of an Armeno-phobic regime? There is a clear road to ethnic cleansing and genocide here – that's what will happen if we think of this scenario."

Hikmet Hajiyev, a special adviser to Azerbaijan's President, told the BBC that Armenians would enjoy the same rights as any other Azeri citizen living in the country. He said they would have equal "linguistic, cultural, religious, including municipal rights".

Azerbaijan also denies that a humanitarian crisis is unfolding. It says it has offered an alternative supply route via the town of Agdam.

"Then afterwards the Lachin road will be opened in 24 hours as well. More roads are better for everybody," Mr Hajiyev said.

https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1808294/armenia-azerbaijan-conflict-lachin-road-blockade-starvation-genocide

Four Armenian soldiers killed after shelling by Azerbaijan: Yerevan

Al-Jazeera
Sept 1 2023

Azerbaijan says it shelled Sotk in retaliation of Armenia’s attack on Kalbajar region that wounded two of its soldiers.

Four Armenian soldiers have been killed after Azerbaijani shelling near the border town of Sotk, northwest of the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh according to Armenia’s Ministry of Defence.

Tensions between Baku and Yerevan have escalated sharply in recent months, as both sides accuse the other of violating agreements and cross-border gunfire.

“As a result of an Azerbaijani provocation, four servicemen were killed and one wounded on the Armenian side,” Armenia’s defence ministry said on Friday, after earlier reporting two were killed.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijan said that Armenia had struck positions in the Kalbajar region using drones, wounding three Azerbaijani servicemen. It said it was taking “retaliatory measures”.

Separately, a Azerbaijani soldier was also injured in cross-border fire.

“We declare that all responsibility for the tension and its consequences lies with the military-political leadership of Armenia,” Baku’s defence ministry said.

Nagorno-Karabakh, internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan, has been a source of conflict between the two Caucasus neighbours since the years leading up to the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Yerevan and Baku have fought two wars for control over the region, which is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan but largely populated by ethnic Armenians.

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

Azerbaijan accused Armenia of building up troops along the two countries’ volatile borders in August, while Armenia accused Azerbaijan’s military of opening fire on European Union observers.

Separatist authorities in the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh said in June that four Armenian soldiers were killed by Azerbaijani fire in Nagorno-Karabakh.