Azeri air force bombs town of Martuni in continuing ceasefire violations

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 11:45,

STEPANAKERT, OCTOBER 26, ARMENPRESS. In addition to the ceasefire violations that shelled Artsakh’s military positions shortly after the ceasefire deal took effect today, the Azeri forces have also bombed residential areas in the town of Martuni, the State Service of Emergency Situations of Artsakh said.

“Moments ago, Azerbaijan bombed the town of Martuni with air force bombers, grossly violating the agreement on humanitarian cessation of hostilities,” it said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Human Rights Watch: Azerbaijan used cluster munitions in Nagorno Karabakh

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 12:20,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijan has repeatedly used widely banned cluster munitions in residential areas in Nagorno Karabakh, Human Rights Watch said, summing up the on-site investigation in Nagorno Karabakh in October 2020.

Human Rights Watch documented four incidents in which Azerbaijan used cluster munitions.

“The continued use of cluster munitions – particularly in populated areas – shows flagrant disregard for the safety of civilians,” said Stephen Goose, arms division director at Human Rights Watch and chair of the Cluster Munition Coalition. “Cluster munitions should never be used by anyone under any circumstances, much less in cities, due to the foreseeable and unacceptable harm to civilians.”

In the conflict over Nagorno Karabakh, Human Rights Watch is investigating whether all sides of the conflict adhere to international humanitarian law, which requires armed forces to distinguish between combatants and civilians, and between military objects and civilian objects, at all times. As such, indiscriminate attacks are prohibited, including attacks which employ a method or means of combat which cannot be directed at a specific legitimate military target. Human Rights Watch has made repeated requests to the Azerbaijani government for access to conduct on-site investigations, but access has not yet been granted.

Human Rights Watch examined remnants of the rockets, impacts, and remnants of submunitions that exploded, as well as dud submunitions that failed to function at several locations in Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno Karabakh. Human Rights Watch also examined photographs taken in the town of Hadrut of a rocket, impacts, and remnants of submunitions that exploded, and a dud submunition that failed to explode. Human Rights Watch also spoke to six people who witnessed the attacks.

Residents of Stepanakert told Human Rights Watch that attacks using cluster munitions began on the morning of September 27 in a residential area no more than 200 meters from the office of the International Committee of the Red Cross.  

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PM Pashinyan talks with Angela Merkel

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 00:05, 4 October, 2020

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 3, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan held a telephone conversation with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. This is his second conversation with Merkel in the recent few days.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister, PM Pashinyan gave information about the developments in the military operations. He told about the participation of Turkish military officers, as well as the recent exposure of sending mercenaries and militants to Syria by Turkey.

The German Chancellor highlighted the cessation of fire and restoration of the peace process in line with the October 1 statement of the Presidents of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chair countries.  

Editing and translating by Tigran Sirekanyan

A complicated region and its complicated war

Arab News, Saudi Arabia
Oct 4 2020
 
 
 
 
CORNELIA MEYER
22:34
 
When the most recent fighting broke out in Nagorno-Karabakh, many were quick to take sides. Stepping back from emotions, a century of history is woven into the interaction between the various players:  Azerbaijan, Armenia, Tukey, Russia, European nations and the US, with oil and gas thrown into a complicated mix.
 
Its roots may be traced back to a century ago, when Joseph Stalin declared Nagorno-Karabakh an oblast, or autonomous administrative unit, within the Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan. Conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia has been simmering and at times erupting since the collapse of the Soviet Union, when Armenia claimed Nagorno-Karabakh but it was legally determined to be an autonomous region inside Azerbaijan. It declared in 1988 that it wanted to unite with Armenia, which Azerbaijan vetoed. Various skirmishes and wars led to about 230,000 ethnic Armenians and 800,000 ethnic Azeris being displaced.
 
After the biggest clashes in the mid 1990s, Russia brokered a cease-fire, and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group has been trying to mediate ever since. It would be easier to deal only with the two combatants; alas, Russia Turkey the US and oil are part of the equation.
 
The presidents of Azerbaijan, Turkey, Georgia, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, witnessed by a supportive US, signed a declaration in 1998 for the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline to bring oil from the Caspian Sea in Azerbaijan to the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan in Turkey, circumventing the Bosphorus. Wary of the simmering conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, the pipeline took a northern route through Georgia, circumventing Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, which considerably increased the price of the project.
 
Turkey was happy to secure energy supplies and to put itself into geopolitical pole position. BP was the main principal among Western oil companies. The US favored any project that diversified energy supplies to Europe away from Russia. The project had its pitfalls as well, especially when the Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili demanded more money just before first oil was to flow westward. Since 2007, the South Caucasus pipeline has transported gas from Azerbaijan to Turkey, running parallel to Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan.
 
The economic and political interests are convoluted. Russia always supported Armenia. However, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is not as close to Russia as his predecessor was. Armenia does, however, still receive Russian weapons at a discount, which does not prevent the Kremlin from selling its weaponry at full price to Baku.
 
The world community as a whole has no interest in a further conflict spiralling out of control, especially not while it needs to deal with a coronavirus pandemic.
 
Cornelia Meyer
 
When hostilities broke out, Turkey immediately sided with Azerbaijan, which is a fellow Turkic and Muslim country, as well as a supplier of energy and therefore a strategic business partner.
 
Turkey’s history with Armenians does not make the situation easier. Between 1915 and 1924 the Ottoman empire expelled and killed 1.5 million Armenians, in what the international community labelled a genocide. This is not something Armenia will ever be willing to forget and it represents considerable historical baggage, complicating the situation further.
 
While Russia sides in principle with Azerbaijan, it is not quite as clear cut as that. Overall Russia’s resources are stretched amid the pandemic and Moscow is not really looking for another conflict with its southern neighbor Turkey, who already stands on opposite sides in Syria and Libya. This goes a long way to explain why Moscow is eager to mediate.
 
The US is divided. While Armenians are successful in lobbying Congress, Azerbaijan and big oil tend to carry some weight in the executive branch, especially under the current administration.
 
Where does this leave us in respect to the conflict? It is important to mediate between the parties. French president Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have tried to do so. The OSCE is certainly the right multilateral framework to tee up structured talks.
 
The EU cannot ignore the goings on in what is its near neighborhood. Europe’s relationship with Turkey is close to breaking point. However, the EU has every interest in diversified oil and gas supplies, for which it needs Turkey. More important, it needs Ankara when it comes to refugees: Let us not forget that Turkey houses more than 3 million Syrian refugees against a promised 6 billion euros from Brussels. Closed borders between Turkey and Greece are the only thing standing between these refugees and the Balkans route.  During last week’s summit the EU had strong words for Turkey’s activities in the Mediterranean. It decided to take a two-tracked approach between potential sanctions and offering a chance for closer co-operation — leaving Ankara to chose the course of action.
 
It is difficult to apportion blame, because the situation in the Caucasus is not black or white, and neither of the adversaries is exactly on the side of the angels. A century of history between the parties complicates the situation further. One thing is for certain, though; the world community as a whole has no interest in a further conflict spiralling out of control, especially not while it needs to deal with a coronavirus pandemic.
 
Cornelia Meyer is a Ph.D.-level economist with 30 years of experience in investment banking and industry. She is chairperson and CEO of business consultancy Meyer Resources. Twitter: @MeyerResources
 

Azerbaijan Used "Unmanned" Bi-planes to Locate Armenian Air Defence

Defense World
Oct 3 2020

Azerbaijan is flying “unmanned” An-2 biplanes as decoys to locate Armenian air defence and artillery position.

The bi-planes fly towards Armenian positions forcing their ground troops to open fire thus exposing them to Azeri raids by drones and ground artillery, topcor.ru reported Friday.

The pilots of the An-2 bi-planes parachute out soon after pointing the aircraft at Armenian positions. The plane’s control are secured with belts to ensure it maintains course.

Earlier, press secretary of the President of Nagorno-Karabakh, Vahram Poghosyan, announced the destruction of the Azerbaijani aircraft by their military. Later, Armenia confirmed shooting down an An-2 plane and added that pilot of the aircraft was missing.

Nagorno-Karabakh has lost 48 soldiers since the beginning of the war. On September 28, Yerevan announced the advance of Azerbaijani troops in Nagorno-Karabakh. On the same day, the attacked side revealed destruction of a dozen tanks of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces. 

Azeri AN-2 shot down by Nagrano-Karabkh forces: Unconfirmed video

An incident was reported on October 1 when an Azeri An-2 biplane was shot  down  by Nagorno-Karabakh missile system. However, the body of the pilot was not  found near the wreckage leading to suspicion that the aircraft may have been unmanned.

YouTube videos of the incident show a blurry image of a slow-flying airplane being shot by a missile. From the footage the aircraft cannot be identified.

However, reports in the Russian media  said the press secretary of the President of Nagorno-Karabakh, Vahram Poghosyan, announced the destruction of the Azerbaijani (AN-2) aircraft by the republic’s military. Later, the press secretary of the Armenian defense department Shushan Stepanyan confirmed that the attacked combat aircraft was an An-2.

Apparently, Azerbaijanis use An-2 in an “unmanned” mode. The steering wheel of the aircraft is secured with belts, and the pilot himself makes a parachute jump at a safe distance from the place of hostilities, Topcor.ru reported.



Pope Francis meets Armenian Apostolic Church leader amid clashes in Nagorno-Karabakh

The Catholic World
Sept 28 2020

Vatican City, Sep 28, 2020 / 10:00 am (CNA).- Pope Francis met with Armenian Apostolic Church leader Karekin II Sunday morning, moving up an appointment scheduled for Monday, because of growing clashes with Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh territory.

Nagorno-Karabakh is an area internationally recognized as belonging to Azerbaijan but controlled by ethnic Armenians. Conflict over the enclave, which erupted into war from 1988 to 1994, has grown in recent months, with Turkey declaring support for Azerbaijan and other states calling for a diplomatic resolution. 

With new fighting at the border during the night of Sept. 26-27, Karekin II, known as the Catholicos of All Armenians, asked to move up his meeting with Pope Francis. The two met a day early, on the morning of Sept. 27, before the pope’s weekly Angelus address.

The focus of the approximately 40-minute meeting was the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, according to ACI Stampa, CNA’s partner agency, which spoke to Catholicos Karekin II before he left Rome Sept. 27.

“The pope expressed his concern and his pain. He also informed us that in his message at the Angelus he would reflect on the situation, which he then did,” Karekin II told ACI Stampa.

“I asked my beloved brother Francis to raise his voice so that justice and peace are restored,” he continued. “The meeting was very cordial, as always in the past, and we ended it by praying together for the restoration of peace.”

It was the sixth meeting between Pope Francis and the supreme head of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

Karekin II said he believed that “it is important to resolve the situation, but at the same time it is important that the international media reflect and have a correct judgment on the situation that has arisen, in order to restore justice.”

He had to cancel planned meetings with Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, prefect of the Congregation for Eastern Churches, and Cardinal Kurt Koch, president of the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian Unity, scheduled for Sept. 28.

He said he had a good relationship with both offices.

The Armenian Apostolic Church regards the apostles Bartholomew and Thaddeus as its founders. The Kingdom of Armenia became the first state to adopt Christianity as its official religion in the fourth century.

The Armenian Apostolic Church has an estimated nine million members worldwide, including around 97% of the almost three million people living in Armenia. It is one of six churches belonging to the Oriental Orthodox communion.

During a visit to Armenia in 2016, Pope Francis reiterated his desire for “full unity” with the Armenian Apostolic Church.

Pope Francis urged people to pray for peace in the Caucasus region after his Angelus address Sept. 27.

“I ask the parties to the conflict to make concrete gestures of goodwill and brotherhood, which can lead to solving problems not with the use of force and arms, but through dialogue and negotiation,” he said.

This was Francis’ second appeal for the region, after he said he was praying for the victims of clashes and their families following the Angelus July 19.


https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2020/09/28/pope-francis-meets-armenian-apostolic-church-leader-amid-clashes-in-nagorno-karabakh/?fbclid=IwAR0tMFn_515SYciurWYZPcPdJ5i1Hn8pyyJy3D2LXrT9t-FdCJBj1yZYHyE






Armenian forces destroy more Azerbaijani military vehicles: video

AMN – Al-Masdar News
Sept 29 2020

BEIRUT, LEBANON (8:25 A.M.) – The Armenian media released more video footage from the ongoing conflict in the Karabkh region on Monday.

In one of the videos posted on YouTube, the Armenian forces can be seen destroying multiple military vehicles belonging to the Azerbaijani army in the Karabakh region.

As shown in the video below, the Armenian forces were able to score multiple direct hits on the Azerbaijani army’s positions near the front-lines in Karabakh.

Clashes between the Azerbaijani and Armenian forces broke out on Sunday, following accusations from both sides about violating the ceasefire on the border.

Since the start of these clashes, both sides have suffered several casualties, including many dead from direct firefights along the border.

Watch the videos at


Reuters: Turkey calls on Armenia to end hostility towards Azerbaijan after clashes

Reuters
Sept 27 2020

Arson leaves San Francisco Armenian Church badly damaged

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 10:02,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 18, ARMENPRESS. The Board of Trustees of the St. Gregory Armenian Apostolic Church of San Francisco announced on Thursday that around 4 a.m. the building adjacent to the church was set ablaze by arsonists, Asbarez reported.

The building housed Vasbouragan Hall, as well as offices for St. Gregory Armenian Church and various organizations. The San Francisco Fire Department responded immediately, however, the building has suffered a great loss,” said the church board of trustees.

This is the second attack on an Armenian establishment in San Francisco in the past two month: In July, the Krouzian-Zekarian Vasbouragan Armenian School and the adjacent community center were targeted by vandals. The exterior of the building was spray painted with anti-Armenian, pro-Azerbaijani graffiti. Investigators have classified the vandalism as a hate crime and the suspects in that case remain at large, police said.

The Church Board of Trustees and community leaders are on site assessing the damage and working closely with San Francisco Fire and Police Departments in their investigation. We will provide more updates to the community as they become available,” added the board.

The Armenian National Committee of America San Francisco Bay Area issued a statement condemning the attack and expressed deep concern over “an emerging pattern of hate crimes ” targeting the Armenian-American community. 

Firefighters initially responded to the blaze just after 4 a.m. at St. Gregory The Illuminator Armenian Apostolic Church at 51 Commonwealth Ave., police said.

Although firefighters were able to eventually extinguish the fire, the building sustained extensive damage, according to San Francisco Fire Department spokesman Lt. Jonathan Baxter. No one was injured as a result of the fire, he said.

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Turkish man stands trial for inciting violence against Armenians in France, verdict due on November 5

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 18 2020

Ahmet Cetin, a 23-year-old French-Turkish resident of Bourg-en-Bresse commune, stood trial on Thursday for ““inciting violence and hatred,” Le Parisien reports.

“May the Turkish government give me 2000 euros and a weapon and I will do what needs to be done, anywhere in France!” he said in an Instagram video this summer.

At the bar of the court, this young married man, father of a family, who works as a maintenance agent, had great difficulty in explaining his intentions. He refutes any membership in the organization of the Gray Wolves, a Turkish ultranationalist anti-Kurdish and anti-Armenian movement.

He denies ever calling for a crackdown on the Armenian community gatherings. However, on July 24, it was he was identified and arrested at the head of a group of a hundred Turkish extremists brandishing iron bars and national flags, making with his fingers the sign of the Gray Wolves, firing mortars and ransacking shops near a gathering of the Armenian community of Decines, in the suburbs of Lyon.

Ahmet Cetin says he has only one aspiration now, “to put his life back in a normal setting, to lead a family and professional life without political or militant activity.” As proof of his good faith, he claims to have deleted all his accounts on social networks.

For the public prosecutor, however, “Ahmet Cetin denies the obvious, his messages aimed at the Armenian community” and, “inviting everyone to take part in the confrontation and the fight.” He requests a six-month suspended prison sentence and a 2,000-euro fine.

The court ruling will be released on November 5.